Master Transcript - University of Northern Iowa

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Master Transcript
Conversation@uni.edu (e-mail and web messages)
1
Anonymous
UNI provides an opportunity for students, faculty, staff, and the larger community to interact with
and develop relationships with people from Iowa, the U.S. and the world. An opportunity exists
for every individual on campus and within the community to have their knowledge, attitudes,
beliefs, and perspectives affirmed, challenged, and further developed by a diversity of people and
creative thought available on campus. UNI has a lot to offer its many stakeholders, but there are
some concerns I have about the current state of the campus:
Too often I sense a preference by some people to ignore or tolerate/put up with diversity. This
type of tolerance sometimes comes with an attitude of “this [diversity], too, shall pass" or "I can
maintain my personal biases and behaviors [undercover] to counter support for diversity, as along
as I can manage not to get caught and end up being called a racist."
Diversity and receiving a multicultural education through courses that are clearly taught from a
multicultural perspective is given a lot of lip service but "show me the money" that indicates a
multicultural academic curriculum exists and is valued to the point that it is reviewed, improved,
implemented, and that allocated resources within each college specifically are designated for
multicultural materials and professional development of faculty to implement a culturally relevant
and responsive pedagogy that will enhance the knowledge, skills, and attitudes of "students first"
who must effectively compete in a global society that is not predominantly white like most of Iowa.
Does UNI want to have a "cutting edge" type of curriculum that educates students prepared for
the global diversity that is and has been a reality or does UNI want to continue to deal with the
"edge" or minimal part of "cutting edge" and deal only with foods, festivals, and feel-good-we-hada-speaker, film, conversation, simulation, performance type events that count as addressing
diversity?
The University has forgotten to build upon its past to nurture its future. UNI owes much of its past
history to the foundation laid by what is called the College of Education today. Yet, the Schindler
Education Center building stands in need of repair, upgrades in technology, and renovation due
to the need for more classroom and office space and a bulging list of unmet needs from budget
cuts and years of personal administrative priorities such as the Wellness Center, the dining
centers, and recently, the McLeod Center. What is the University's commitment to recruiting,
supporting, and retaining U.S. faculty of color? What is the University's interest in knowing about
and addressing concerns of U.S. faculty of color and international faculty currently teaching at
UNI? There are workplace issues that white faculty do not personally experience or have to
address that U.S. faculty of color and international faculty experience and have to address that
involve, students, staff, other faculty, and administration. Yes, this is a personnel matter with
privacy issues, but does the administration care enough to conduct their own annual study and
conversations to determine the status of what's really going on with all of their faculty, especially
faculty that represent a minority on a predominantly white campus who are at risk of
mistreatment, misunderstanding, and exclusion? The Students First campaign/slogan is a good
marketing message to emphasize to students and their families that they are important to the
University. What does this message imply if you are faculty? Is there a similar message that
needs to be sent about how faculty is valued and viewed? Within the last 2 years, many faculty
were given one ink cartridge, one package of paper, and $200-$300 for the year. The allotted
amount was to cover printing costs for your assigned classes for both semesters, travel, office
supplies and classroom materials. Money left over by the end of the year went back into
department accounts. I talked with several faculty who, like myself, are printing less paper, but
the paper we do print is what we personally buy and use on our home printers. That translates
into additional dollars for ink cartridges we purchase for our printers at home. Often, materials
needed for class instruction is purchased with personal faculty funds.
I say all this to express my concern that "Students First" implies the need to provide the best
possible for all students, and traditionally when educators do this, they often are faced with the
need to supplement under funded allocations to try to do what's needed to give the students the
best education possible. Some of us would appreciate a "Thank you" every now and then (or
maybe even a marketing message that indicates our contribution to what UNI is suppose to be
about--education). I've provided feedback that I hope will generate conversation about a few real
experiences and concerns that impact the campus climate and can contribute to the continued
growth and development of a more positive and progressive UNI campus community.
2
Anonymous
I heard President Koob talking at an address to the graduate faculty. He stated that UNI faculty
should not be focused on producing ideas but rather people. I found it bothersome that President
Koob expressed a view that does not allow for diversity of goals among faculty. In actual fact, we
do have faculty at UNI who have secured major grants and who do little teaching currently. I
think it would improve the academic climate at UNI if each faculty member felt the freedom to
define him or herself rather than to feel that he or she must conform to an identity and role
chosen by the president. This feels oppressive!
3
Anonymous
Start a search committee to replace Koob with someone interested in academics.
4
Anonymous
Making it easier to work at night and during breaks...don't turn off the heat in office buildings on
weekends/breaks and esp. don't give people parking tickets for being in an A lot after 1am! I'm
often working til 3 or 4--it's stupid that I'd have to move my car in the middle of the night to a far
away lot to avoid getting ticketed (I understand the rule is for snow removal--in which case maybe
it could only be enforced when there's actually snow to remove). Also, do things to make it easier
for people to meet other faculty on campus (events?). It often takes years for people to start
building friendships and meeting people outside of their depts.
5
Anonymous
If the administration would not lie to faculty, either individually or en masse, that would improve
the campus environment.
6
Individual
Given the increased prevalence of learning disabilities and other special circumstances, a
dedicated "testing center" would enhance both faculty and student quality of life. When
administering an examination, it is difficult to locate enough alcoves, closets, hallways, rooms,
etc. to accommodate student needs for isolated test areas. On rare occasions, instructors are
asked to provide a computer, which is extremely challenging. Kirkwood has a "test center" which
seems to provide a quality and professional solution to the task of providing special testing
situations.
7
Individual
My favorite thing about teaching at UNI is the students. If being surrounded by hundreds of
bright, caring, optimistic, hard-working "next generationn-ers" doesn't brighten your outlook and
give you hope, what can? I think the campus could be improved by growing an orchard. A trip
across campus shows we already value trees. We have some open spaces on campus; why not
grow apples? We could be a big test plot for ISU or UMN. Different student and faculty groups
could take turns performing year-round maintenance (no hired help!), Then, in the fall we could
harvest the apples, have the dining halls feature homemade apple pies, and donate a goodly
portion of the harvest to food pantries. Many of our students would become familiar with growing
apples, and maybe many would later, after graduation, have apple trees in their own backyards.
Oh, we also need someone to play in the Campanile.
8
Individual
What makes it great:
Wonderful workspace
Great Custodial services/pretty good support services
Beautiful campus grounds
Friendly campus
What Could Make it Better
Spousal hires (UNI would be so much more inclined to keep excellent faculty)
More intellectual environment (right now there is no intellectual environment.)
Required cultural activities that students attend. Bring more speakers in the challenge students.
They need to be challenged.
Required novels/nonfiction books that students read every semester, or at least every year.
Much, much more expected from students. They are incredibly spoiled by their cushy lifestyles
(and they're busily going in debt for them). I know, because I teach a consumerism unit in my
media literacy class, and I make students interview UNI peers about their consumption habits.
You would not believe what they are spending their money on and how they spend their time. To
afford these lifestyles, students generally work too many hours. I feel like I'm teaching high
school half the time, b/c students don't have "the time" to devote to their class work. They should
know that a three-credit course requires at least 6 hours a week of study. Right now, they think
they should devote about 1 hour a week to outside class work. They complain if you demand
more. We need to change UNI culture at large so all professors expect more. And for students
who are putting themselves through college, they need to understand that they will most likely not
be able to graduate in 4 years. They need to sign up for less classes each semester or find
another way to support their education. And we should help educate students on what they
REALLY need to succeed in college--not an XBox, not 15 pairs of jeans, not a brand new car, not
all the electronic gadgets they are purchasing regularly, not Applebee’s 3 times a week.
Library orientation: students have no clue how the library works. They rely solely on the Internet
for the bulk of their research. There should be a common culture of library knowledge that goes
beyond freshmen orientation. My students' understanding of library holdings is absolutely dismal.
Even the seniors. I have had seniors tell me they've never once checked out a book the entire
time they've been in college. This is a huge disservice to the students, and we need to break the
habits they developed in high school.
Safe pedestrian walkways. We should require drivers to STOP at all pedestrian crossings on
College St. and especially 23d st. The culture here is that drivers always have the right of way,
and I have been nearly hit a few times, and have witnessed other people almost get hit.
Teaching assistant support. I teach a class with 120 students. I have no teaching assistants. I'm
all alone here. Also, uniformity in terms of class load. In the history department, any class with
60 or more students counts as 2 classes. In the Comm. Studies Dept., a class of 120 students
(without a TA) counts as one class. There was one semester where I did get a TA assigned to
me, but she was Russian and had no clue about Media and Culture. She was also hopeless. It
took more work on my part just getting her to do the simple tasks that I asked. I would prefer very
smart undergraduate seniors as TAs, who could do a work study with me.
Graduate Students. If you can't do it well, don't do it. Every graduate student I've ever had to
work with has been incredibly lame in our program. There is simply no reward for taking them on.
I end up spending hours correcting bad writing. Standards are low. What is the point? There is
no support for faculty to help graduate students...they give me no intellectual stimulation, just
headaches. There are others in my dept. who may feel differently, but I've had horrible
experiences. Every untenured faculty should get at least one semester off in their first six years.
More support for research. For anyone in this university with an ambitious research agenda
(which should be all of us, right?) it's impossible to teach well. We should at least go to a 2/3
load. I work 60-70 hours a week at least.
Not so much emphasis on Sports. This Students First campaign is all about the McCloud Center.
I'd like to see students' intellectual abilities emphasized, celebrated, and better supported. We
have some great students here who are fantastically bright and creative. There should be a
system in place that constantly recognizes these students and highlights their work.
9
Anonymous
I think that faculty members need more opportunities for grants within the university and more
travel money to support professional development efforts. A few years ago, we had Provost mini
grants, computer grants, undergraduate experiential education grants, and more.
10 Anonymous
It is so nice to be able to have an office to myself. However, it would be better if I had a window
or air conditioning. I can hardly stand to work in my office because it is so hot. There needs to
be equity in this area for all UNI faculty. It would be nice to be able to take a course a year at UNI
free of charge in order to keep our certification up to date. I know many other institutions that
offer this to their faculty. A huge discount for being a member at the Wellness Center would be a
perk and give all of us a more positive outlook if we were exercising regularly. Good Businesses
do this for their staff because it is valued.
11 Anonymous
It could be better by removing student advising responsibilities from the faculty. Centralize the
process at the Advising and Career Center people. From what I can tell few students find their
advisors helpful anyway so it is not a good use of either student or faculty time."
12 Individual
A GREAT PLACE TO WORK
1. Rod Library: Great professionals, staff, and student workers. The ILL staff is excellent and
their ability to obtain much needed resources is super.
2. Students: Highly motivated, eager to learn, good people.
3. 23rd Street Market: Always there offering excellent salads and soups at reasonable prices.
The supervisor is interested in his consumers and the student workers are good workers with
excellent attitudes.
4. Tech support from Mark Dobie and Tom Turner makes life easier.
5. Excellent computers, which are updated periodically.
6. Great office, which allows me to get my job done.
7. Grad College and David Walker: Over the years David & the Grad college have provided
much financial assistance in helping me to get to archives, libraries, conferences, etc.
8. Dean's Office: In recent years the Dean has provided travel funds and other finances that has
helped with my research.
9. Faculty Union: We are probably better off financially with a union.
10. Graduate & undergraduate assistants: Their assistance in so many ways has made life
easier. 11. Rowena Tan: I served on the Honor's committee that recommended Rowena be
hired. She has done an excellent job in making the CSBS honors program to be successful.
12. Ann Thill: A great secretary. She is there for all of us and always with a cheerful smile.
She's a joy. 13. Gene Lutz and Sharon: I have received external funding for over 13 years. The
funding goes through the Center. Gene and Sharon have been great.
14. Ed Ebert: He has always been there to help with all aspects of my grant.
15. Sue Strever: She is a P&S employee who manages my grant. What a gift. She is a great
talent.
16. A beautiful campus: I thanked President Curris some years ago for his interest in making
UNI a very attractive campus.
WHAT WOULD MAKE IT BETTER:
1. More financial support for students. They work more hours than is good for serious academic
study.
2. A clearer vision from the Provost and President regarding our academic mission.
3. No head should serve three terms (5 years). A one time six-year term should be sufficient.
4. Insufficient review of instructor classroom performance. Instructors should be assessed every
semester.
5. An ombudsman (person) should be appointed so that students, faculty, and staff can
communicate their concerns. When faculty is not assessed and students are completely
frustrated with an instructor they really have no recourse. They are often very afraid to speak to
the instructor, head, and dean. In my department we have an instructor who just reads from the
text every day to undergrad and grad students. They have tried without success to get her to
change with absolutely no success. I hear their anger, their outrage, their fury without ever
asking. When I get to class they will be talking about their frustrations, etc.
6. On Advising: Does advising matter? Is it part of our service obligation or our teaching
obligation? How is it rewarded? In this department one professor has managed to never advise
an undergraduate student thanks to the Head while all the rest of us advise many, many
students. Spending quality time with students to help them takes times yet there is considerable
disparity in this department. It would be a good idea to actually have students complete a survey
as it relates to advising. Thank you.
13 Individual
Professional development, awards, research support is what keeps excellent junior faculty at UNI
and attracts new ones. Astronomic parking fees (when A Lots are always full) are a constant
source of aggravation. As a faculty, I am required to be on campus. Why am I charged for coming
to and staying on campus to be available to students? We need more opportunities for group
work that is interdisciplinary. However, such work is not rewarded by departments (which are
"provincial" and protective of turfs). There should be special mention of the value of group work
and collaborative work with students in tenure decisions, awards, etc. There is not sufficient
outreach to former graduate students. What makes me stay at UNI is the excellent benefits
package, esp. health plans, which is unique to our institution. Please help so that this will not
further erode in the future.
14 Individual
While pursuing my Ph.D. at the University of Idaho, spouses of faculty members were eligible to
take classes for $5 a credit. Has a similar program for faculty spouses at UNI ever been
discussed? I know there are several other faculty members in our school who have had this
same discussion. Many of the newer faculty have spouses who are interested in pursuing
advanced degrees. I would also like to add that UNI has been a wonderful place to work with
many more positives than negatives.
15 Anonymous
The graduate program has been, at the department level, hijacked by the department head.... he
has turned it into a degree mill for "special groups" and only one or two faculty have any teaching
responsibilities with the "special groups" of graduate students who are awarded degrees for
incompetence.
16 Anonymous
What would make UNI a great place to work?
If faculty controlled the programs and if faculty were paid the same as administrators that do not
teach students barring these two impossibilities reinstating the early retirement program would be
great!!!!!!
17 Anonymous
I believe the issue of faculty teaching load has become a major problem. My current teaching
load is double what it was 5 years ago and it is double the teaching load of my fellow tenured
faculty members in other departments on campus. It has had a profound and negative impact on
the quality of my work.
18 Anonymous
Having the administration actually support research and stop making faculty feel like they get
research accomplished in spite of the UNI administration. Put the words research in the mission
statement.
19 Individual
It would be great to have a faculty "spousal accommodation" policy at UNI. I speak for myself (my
husband commutes 70 mi to Grinnell College 4 times a week), but I am not the only one who
would benefit with such policy in place. We have a fellow faculty member at the department who
is currently on leave, mainly because his wife couldn't get a position at UNI. She took a job at the
U of Missouri, which has a spousal accommodation policy, and now they both work there. I know
they would like to come back to UNI if they had a chance. I also believe that such policy would
positively affect scholarly productivity of faculty couples in the long term. Thank you for this
opportunity. UNI is a great place to work!
20 Individual
UNI is a great place to work. The people who work at UNI are one of the reasons that make this
a great place to work. These employees are some of the hardest working, dedicated individuals
that I have seen. They put in extra hours that it takes to get the job done. They do many different
types of tasks, and have to juggle many responsibilities at one time. Also, most of the employees
have a welcome smile, and Hello to everyone they see. One of the areas that could be improved
would be for departments to allow individuals to have the summer off to tend to their families.
Even though departments have this ability to do this, they are reluctant to do this. The
departments are worried that more of their staff may request this time off, and don't want to be left
short staffed. Even though not many individuals would be able to afford this option (time off
without pay or benefits), it would be welcomed to those employees that have children at home, to
spend the summer with them. It would save the departments money, and it would help relieve
stress for those employees wishing to take this option. Can't we get by on less for the summer, in
order to achieve this great benefit?
21 Individual
UNI is a true, shining example of 'doing more with less'! Our staff may have dwindled and our
student body (temporarily hopefully) may be down, but UNI continues to not only get the job
done, but to do it exceedingly well! Look at our academic record, look at our student
athletes..............when you look at the honors overall of both our staff and students, we seem to
be doing everything right!
More recognition programs might be a good start at instilling in our campus the 'pride' it needs to
keep moving forward!
22 Individual
I had a thought during our last meeting about a benefit for P&S staff that I've been meaning to
share so I'm glad you sent this reminder out. I would like to see some sort of Professional
Development Leave or Reassignment or whatever they are calling it now for faculty offered to
P&S employees as well. I believe it would be especially useful for those of us who teach in the
classroom and/or work in positions that for which the University offers little opportunity in
established classes for professional development.
Just a thought.
23 Anonymous
I'm very supportive of President Koob's idea to have a campus-wide
discussion about how to make this a better place to work, as well as a place
that works. His actions show how much he values his faculty and staff, and I
genuinely believe that he cares about our opinions. I would venture a guess
that few institutions of our size enjoy such a relationship with their
president.
I find it interesting -- and sometimes frustrating -- that I know so few people
on campus. I cannot tell you how many times I've gone to a church function,
social event, or fundraising event in the Cedar Valley, introduced myself to a
random stranger, and after a few minutes, discovered we both work for UNI.
Based on that example, I think one topic of discussion could center around that
obstacle (or opportunity for growth). Right now, we don't know each other.
Now, I realize it's a large community, but other than the President's picnic in
the fall, we don't do much to encourage interaction outside our own departments.
One consequence is that we begin to see our individual departments as
mini-organizations, and we start to develop our own identities. While that is not
necessarily a negative, it can become a problem if individual departments begin
operating too independently from the University as a whole. The end result? Some
departments on campus are more challenging to work with than others, and that
makes it difficult for everyone to give their best.
The individual VP's have done some great work in addressing these issues. I have
noticed some partnerships emerging as of late, where they seemed impossible 3
years ago (before massive budget cuts forced us to start playing nice! :) . We're
organized more efficiently, and consequently, we're working better... but I don't
think people *feel* better yet.
An observation - When I meet a stranger that turns out to be a fellow
UNI-employee, we inevitably find ourselves talking about how the changes and
budget cuts have affected our offices and the way we do business. I've
consciously tried to avoid the topic, but somehow it still becomes the center of
the conversation. Not everyone conveys negative feelings, but I hear things like,
We're just maxed out. We're all exhausted. I don't think we can squeeze much more from the
turnip. I don't know how much more of this we can take. We're ALL
feeling it, so much like the weather, we turn to it as a common ground topic.
Yes, we've endured the storm well on paper, but how do people feel? And how would
we know how everyone else is feeling when we don't know each other?
24 Anonymous
A better system of promotion for P&S and merit staff. People need to be able to aspire to
promotion without having to apply for a job and leave their current job.
25 Individual
If you would like a copy of our Faculty and Staff Climate survey, let me know. It might be of some
assistance to you in this endeavor.
26 Individual
I have been an employee of UNI twice and I still think it is a
wonderfull place of employment. I am retired from John Deere, someone
once asked if there was life after Deere's. Yes there is I am proof of
this. I work in a place with good people, a job that pays very
compatible with industry, and it is an enjoyable place to work, it is
even fun to come to work. I love this place.
27 Individual
I'm a P&S person, who loves working at UNI and wants to add my two
cents on why UNI is a great place to work.
1) UNI has a faculty who actually teach (as opposed to TAs) and cares
about students.
2) UNI has an attractive campus that offers state of the art
facilities;thus, it attracts students from outside of Iowa and the
United States.
3) UNI faculty and staff do their best to accomidate the requests and
needs of others working on campus.
28 Individual
What makes us great is the leadership of Maucker Union. Duh!
Ok..seriously...A couple things strike me. One is there does (for the most part) seem to be a real
sense of community. I know it isn't perfect, but it seems far stronger than other places -at least
when I talk to my colleagues at other places. We need to hold on to and build that sense of
community. Another thing is I think we have an interesting mix of staff that are from the inside,
i.e. UNI alums, combined with fresh ideas from the "outside". The loyalty of those who went to
school here combines with the new loyalty of people who like the sense of community. It builds
on each other. We also (again - for the most part) value the contribution we make in working with
students. People get how important what we do with/for students is.
29 Individual
Here's a thought for you to take on this issue. I know that our department is as guilty as the next,
but we are working to provide a means to obtain feedback from our users. As an adjunct
instructor, I deal with MANY frustrated students. They don't like the fact that their professors
don't put much effort in their classes and they are not learning what they need. I've asked Mixsell
about this, and I found out that each major does not have a survey/review about their program.
Wouldn't it be valuable for each major to fill out a program specific form/questionaire regarding
what they like/don't like, what improvements are needed in the programs, what they like about
their programs, etc? Compilation of this data would provide departments invaluable information
about what the students' needs are. Making this public would hold departments accountable.
For reference, I know that Interior Design has all of their graduates complete a similar type
survey.
30 Individual
This is an interesting opportunity. The University of Northern Iowa is a great place to work
because of buildings like the Gallagher Bluedorn Performing Arts Center where I receive phone
calls each day from campus groups, the local symphony, professional promoters and community
leaders interested in hosting an event at the GBPAC. This building has given the University a
bridge into the community and has been able to assist to unify communities within the Cedar
Valley. I enjoy working at the GBPAC and for the University because of the partnership between
the university and the community. Take care.
31 Individual
Below is a list of various aspects that I appreciate about working at UNI
Professional work environment
Friendly, helpful staff
Supportive administration and leadership
Community involvement and support
Strong athletics program
Beautiful, well-kept campus
Outstanding residential life program
Superior dining facilities
32 Individual
What makes UNI a great place to work? My take:
1. Family atmosphere. People here generally care about each other.
2. Students First. I believe we do this. This is what we should be about and
I think that we are.
3. We are what we are and we are ok with it. We are not a big research
univeristy with a hospital, or whatever. We are comfortable in doing what
we do at UNI.
4. Leadership at the top that is not micro-managing in nature. That helps
allow everyone to work, grow and be proud of the work.
5. Good facilities, great community.
Thank you.
33 Individual
We have a wonderful campus. It is a joy to walk the sidewalks during the Spring and Fall. The
colors of the flowers and trees are astounding. Our campus is so beautiful and green compared
with other campuses. There have been so many times when I wished I could seat under one of
these trees or along the sidewalks. I know many other people at UNI - students and staff - who
feel the same.
Can the University place some benches along sidewalks such as the north side of Gilchrist, the
area around the campanile, the east side of campus, or between Maucker Union and the Physics
Building? Then we really can enjoy and take "advantage" of the work that our great landscape
designers and students had done on campus.
34 Individual
Positive aspects of working at UNI:
UNI is an exciting place to be. There are many activities, interesting students, staff and visitors.
The climate is intellectually stimulating. I am encouraged to be creative in my job. Because of
that, I have ownership my job. I am willing to work long hours and to be flexible in my work
schedule. Faculty and staff genuinely care about students and each other. Change is a constant
at UNI and I like that. I work in a supportive team that works very hard to serve students.
Negative aspects of working at UNI:
It's tough to do more with less people and less resources. Because staff emembers are so
stretched, I hope the "not my job" attitude doesn't creep into the campus climate. Continuing
education should be more easily accessible and should be actively encouraged for all employees
- including flex schedules, allowing for release time to attend classes, and financial incentives
(e.g. increased pay or free tuition). Parking isn't so great either.
Thanks for asking!
35 Individual
Right when I got this email and again when I got the reminder email today, the things that come
to my mind offhand that make UNI a great place to work are:
1) friendly campus/people - (students and staff)
2) good benefits
3) the opportunity to get to meet so many people (and different people - diverse people)
4) a supportive work environment - peers want to see you do well.
5) great buildings and attractive campus (we actually have open areas around campus grass/trees - not all concrete and buildings like some campuses). These open areas also allow
students to have an area to play and relax without leaving campus on nice days.
What can make UNI a better place to work:
1) Better benefits - For ex., no parking pass for staff, more vacation for SCMP, option to earn
comp. time (some departments on campus restrict it's usage - mine for ex.).
2) Less politics. Some things it seems like takes forever to get done as there are so many
committees and politics etc... (this is more hear say than personal experience.)
I don't know I will have to give it more thought. If I think of anything else, I'll let you know. Have a
good day.
36 Individual
I believe UNI's greatest asset is it's staff. People here truly care
about our students and each other. We nurture our students and take
pride in their accomplishments and share their goals. Staff has become
family in some instances.
What would make it better? Perhaps we could provide more opportunities
for staff recognition and awards. Monetary rewards are always
appreciated, too! I enjoy working with staff from other offices and
believe it truly benefits us all when we form relationships with other
departments. Friends are always willing to help friends!
37 Individual
UNI is a great place to work because we are given the chance to have in
put into things. They want us to grow in our jobs both personally &
professionally.
I have been on campus 20 years. I have had so many opportunities to
become a more rounded person. I have been given the chance and pushed to
do new things that I never would have done on my own. I feel people I work for have invested
time & energy in me and value I have given back in return. Most people I know will work at a job
all of their lives and not be . I have loved all but 1 year of my working here.
I would like to see it more equal between departments as far as job
perks (some get to have lunches, pizza parties, pot lucks etc on company
time and some don't). Would like to see people in food service get more
desperately needed help to get the jobs done.
I would like to see the board of regents or the president come and talk
to the people who cook the food or clean the toilets, to see their views
on how things could be looked at differently in their departments.
And of course better parking for the staff in the food services.
I have learned and grown from the motivational speakers we have had for
workshops. I would like to see more of these as we have not had many in
the past few years.
38 Individual
I feel a major reason UNI is a great place to work is the "students
first" attitude throughout campus. While we are mindful of the fact
that we must be responsible stewards of state funds, we measure success
in terms of student successes rather than just profit.
And I believe this attitude carries over in the way we related to
faculty and staff as well. I am very proud of UNI's Catastrophic
Illiness program, and I commend the University for caring abouts its
people enough to promote a program that strongly encourages us to care
about one another as well.
I appreciate the good health care program offered here at UNI, but would
like to see the plan expanded to include vision coverage. I would also
welcome the re-instatement of the early retirement program.
Thank you for the opportunity to provide input.
39 Individual
I know we are a state school and all but my sister used to work at AZ
State Univ, also a state school. There the employees were allowed to
take up to 6 hours a semester for just $25 per credit hour. There is
also a coalition of small private schools in Iowa that have an agreement
where the children of employees can attend any of the other schools
tuition free for all 4years of college. Some of them are Wartburg,
Simpson, Grinnell, Loras, Cornell.
Now, I don't expect to have free tuition for my kids, or $25 per hour
tuition for me, but couldn't there be something better than having to
beg for tuition reimbursment money? Iowa high school kids taking
classes here get a class (not credit hour) for $250. Even that would be
a huge break.
Anyway, that's my suggestion -- some kind of across the board tuition
break for employees or their kids.
40 Anonymous
Donating our sick time to sick people rather than having to donate
vacation/comp time.
41 Group
Benefits that could help to make UNI the Workplace of Preference for the Cedar Valley:
·
Family Friendly Services
o
Dual career couples network. (Provide job search support for spouses of UNI employees)
o
Child-care center available to all employees.
o
100% tuition reimbursement for staff and 50% tuition reimbursement for family members.
o
Fund the Staff Training Grant at 100%.
o
Lactation rooms in all buildings.
o
Build elevated, covered walkways to various locations on campus. Reduce slips, trips, falls,
and direct contact with inclement weather.
o
Fund college scholarships for children of UNI staff.
o
Elder care insurance and care programs.
o
Subsidize entertainment at the GBPAC for students, faculty, staff, and general public.
o
Better, cheaper parking and enforcing parking rules, or assigned parking spaces
·
Flexible Work Arrangements
o
Compressed work week option (e.g., four ten-hour days).
o
Flex-time in work start and end times. (Some employees would prefer to come in earlier and
leave earlier, possibly take shorter lunches, etc.)
o
Ability to change from 100% full-time to “reduced” full-time.
o
Close the University between Christmas and New Years by increasing paid holidays from 9
to 13. Departments necessary to keep the University functioning (ie, Utilities, Power Plant, and
Public Safety) could bid to work during that time and be paid double time/comp time. Most senior
employees would have first chance. Not only would this be a great benefit for employees, but it
would also save energy costs by not heating and lighting buildings nor having to do complete
snow removal.
o
Increased vacation accrual for merit employees.
o
Use sick days for family illness/care.
·
Medical and Health Benefits
o
Free WRC membership.
o
Vision care package.
o
Better dental package – adult orthodontics (the AFSCME contract increases to dental
coverage will be effective Jan. 2005. Should consideration be give to increasing faculty,
UNISCMP and P&S coverage?)
·
Professional Development Services
o
100% tuition reimbursement for staff and 50% tuition reimbursement for family members.
o
Bring in famous speakers from around the world.
o
Support staff career advancement and career development at all levels of management.
o
Support for professional designations and professional memberships in organizations.
o
Institute a continuous improvement program that involves all levels of staff on the campus.
o
Career development, succession planning. Continued training and development.
o
Because Pepsi has the UNI contract, negotiate with them for funds each year for staff
training and development. This is happening at the University of Iowa with Coca Cola.
o
Electronic training through “Skillsoft.”
o
Performance planning for all employees.
·
Mediation and Legal Services
o
Immigration services.
o
Peer-review grievance procedure.
o
Ombudsman office.
The following suggestions represent more intangible means of making the university a workplace
of preference. The general headings may be better conceptualized as initiatives with the
suggested items as intended end goals.
·
Greater Accessibility to Managers, Supervisors, and Administration
o
More interaction from the top down.
o
Open door policy from all managers, supervisors, Deans, Directors, and Department Heads.
o
Managers are visible, present, and accessible.
o
More regular feedback from managers
o
Encourage managers to micro-manage less, use more constructive and supportive styles
when working with their staff..
·
Aligning our work with UNI’s vision and core values
o
Administration’s communication aligned with UNI vision.
o
Employees follow-up with customers they’ve helped.
o
Helping customers takes precedence over personal conversations.
o
Employees are dedicated to the mission. Don’t just show up for a check. Interested in
helping others get their work done.
o
Employees are willing to help others and are willing to be accountable to co-workers.
·
Personal and Personable Work Atmosphere:
o
Managers encourage others to make work enjoyable.
o
Eliminate the implied and subtle division between merit, P&S, and faculty.
o
Managers, Supervisors, and Directors encourage employees’ risk-taking and innovation.
o
Give employees reasons to smile when working with others.
o
Give employees reasons to speak highly and positively about their workplace.
o
Show employees ways that they can go “above and beyond” to answer questions, even if
not in your field … don’t “pass the buck” to someone else to handle.
o
Provide top management support for staff recognition programs.
o
Deans, Directors, Department Heads find ways to celebrate achievements within their work
groups.
o
Positive attitudes from the top down.
o
More campus-wide events and celebrations.
o
Establish a “fix the problem, not the blame” approach; this encourages employees to try
harder rather than grow complacent
42 Individual
Why is UNI a great place to work?
A healthy organization has a work climate in which there is:
Shared Vision (inspirational, inclusive, easily communicated, beneficial to both the organization
and the individual, widely accepted by members of the group)
Sense of Community
Positive Outlook
Commitment to Quality
At UNI that is demonstrated in the collaboration, mutual respect, sharing of resources for the
common good, and social interaction. In particular at this time in the history of UNI, there is great
role modeling from Cabinet members by their cross-Division teamwork, support and respect.
Of course, there are pockets of problems and dysfunction but healthy working groups seem to
flourish where there is on-going open communication throughout departments/Divisions, where all
jobs are valued, input from all levels is welcome and invited, employees are empowered to take
ownership and some control over their areas of responsibility, where there is recognition and
acknowledgement for efforts, training and educational opportunities for personal and professional
growth are provided at all levels and classifications, where there is trust and flexibility allowed to
meet departmental and employee needs. These practices occur in many departments on
campus.
Some specific great things include:
UNI benefit package
Vacation allowances
The President’s picnic and other social community gatherings
Cross-dept/Division initiatives which involve a variety of students, faculty, and staff together
The communication between student leadership and faculty/staff leadership
The quality of staff and faculty recruited in line with student centered values
The value placed on organizational and individual wellness and campus wide support for
efforts/programs/services in wellness
The great wellness/fitness/recreational facilities available to facilitate employee wellness
The opportunities for students, faculty, and staff to participate in fitness, wellness, and
recreational activities together (and with retirees) for cross-generational and cross-class
interaction and camaraderie
Educational programs available
The GBPAC and all the programs it offers in performing arts
The support of leadership in efforts to increase the diversity of the community and to provide a
welcoming supportive environment to a diverse population
What Can Make UNI Better?
There are still places and groups of people on campus where attitudes of class and superiority
exist, where all jobs and persons in those jobs are not valued, where faculty or others in higher
positions expect privileges due to rank and don’t recognize or embrace the value of those in other
jobs on campus. There are places on campus where input is not invited or welcomed from those
in merit positions or where professional development and educational opportunities are not
provided those in merit positions. There are places where the “good ol’ boy” style of operation
exists, where favors are bought and privileges exchanged among those of privilege. We need to
continue to strive to address issues of inequality so that ethical professional behavior is absolute
and so that all employees feel valued and involved in the mission of the university.
With budget cuts and declining enrollment, staff reductions and loss of resources has many
departments struggling to uphold the quality of service students deserve. Committed employees
are working long hours, assuming more duties, and becoming exhausted and drained because
the human resource level at UNI does not match the need/demand for programs and services.
Department leaders are looking for ways to manage unmanageable work loads, endless 60 hour
work weeks, and many more responsibilities than reasonable. We are headed for crisis if
resources cannot be returned or demands reduced. While resources decline, we have added
another four weeks of summer school, services are expected to span 12 months, demands for
services increase, and yet we are doing this with no increase in staffing. Employees are finding
they can’t “get away”, take vacations, be gone for more than a few days at a time. The stress
increases. We are taxing good people to their limits and beyond. They hate to complain because
they are dedicated to our mission, but they are wearing down.
There are audits available to assess the health of organizations that might be interesting to use
here at UNI, if a more structured assessment is desired.
43 Individual
1. I would like to see the early retirement program at 57 and 15 years. I believe the insurance
benefits are what have driven the early retirement costs so high. I believe it is extremely
important that UNI continue insurance coverage for retirees but the retirees would continue to pay
their part. I would like to continue insurance coverage at the family rate I currently pay.
2. I believe all UNI employees should pay their part of insurance coverage (rather single or
family). This would spread the cost of insurance equally over everyone employed on campus.
44 Individual
I would like to see either very minimal user fees charged for the WRC (not $140) or _no _fees
charged for faculty and staff (students already can use the facilities with their fees included in
their tution). For health purposes and the high premiums, I think it would be great to encourage
exercise to stay healthy for all students, faculty and staff.
45 Individual
It sems to be increasingly more difficult for merit employees to transfer to new positions within the
university whether the position is merit out of class or from merit to P.&S. One would believe tha
longevity good attendance and evaluations (including minimum qualifications), would be given a
better chance for advancement. From what I've seen and experienced, this opportunity exists for
the chosen few.
46 Individual
I do believe UNI is a great place to work. I enjoy working with the faculty, staff, and students. I
love being in a university environment for the intellectual stimulation and the professionalism I
have experienced in my 23 years of working here, not to mention the energy I feel from the
students! When I walk around this campus I feel great pride in being a part of it and truly enjoy
the beautiful surroundings.
I do, however, wish there were better opportunities for staff to advance to other positions here. I
don't feel that much value is placed on having many years of dedication, service and hard work at
this University. I think there is a stigma attached to being a merit employee and it's hard to be
taken seriously as someone that might advance to a P&S position. After applying for a P&S
position that I indeed met the qualifications for, including a BA from this University, I was told that
the position was a "professional" position and was discouraged from applying by an individual
from Human Resources. I find that very disheartening. There should also be a system set up
similar to what faculty have for receiving merit salary increases. That way a merit employee
could be rewarded for hard work and putting extra effort into his/her job.
47 Individual
Thank you for the opportunity to provide feedback.
I would like to suggest that an active, campus-wide safety program that is endorsed and
promoted by the President and the Cabinet would accomplish two goals. First, it would reduce
both the number of work related injuries and illnesses and the resulting human pain and suffering
and related expense. Second, it would also send a message to employees that UNI cares about
them and their basic workplace safety. There is a current safety program with two excellent
employees (Cindy Houlsen and Wendell Reese) but it is limited in its scope by its departmental
affiliation (Physical Plant), its limited funding and especially by the lack of overall administrative
support.
48 Individual
1. elected chairs
2. binding arbitration
3. restore grad college project grants
4. reduce class size
5. help finance travel to do research--see #3
49 Individual
I have a couple of thoughts on things that could be done to "make UNI a better place to work."
In light of budget shortfalls, money and energy could be conserved on this campus. I see no effort
made at lights being turned off or computers put to sleep. No one says turn off lights at night, or
for the weekend. No one says turn down the thermostat when you leave. Businesses such as
Deere & Co., constantly remind employees to save energy. They send e-mails detailing energy
savings (in dollars and cents) resulting from these efforts.
Having the entire campus use certain software would help on several fronts: it would be easier to
share documents, web designers wouldn't have to spend so much time making sure that their site
looks fine in all the different browsers and some cost savings may be able to be achieved.
How about a 'suggestion box'? Set up an e-mail account that faculty, staff and students could
send suggestions to with helpful ideas for campus improvements. When we were faced with
those terrible budget cuts why weren't we asked for ideas on how to save money?
Thanks for listening.
50 Individual
I would like to offer the following suggestions for improving the quality of life for UNI faculty.
1. Convert to a system of elected departmental chairperson rather than appointed departmental
heads. Chairperson elected for, say 3 year terms, will be more closely aligned with the faculty
than the administration. This will help to assure faculty that the chairperson is truly looking out for
their own interest. Most major universities and many not so major universities have elected
chairpersons rather than appointed heads, and the system works extremely well.
2. Improve early retirement packages and make them more permanent. Faculty planning for
early retirement need to be assured that a particular early retirement package will be available
when they become eligible for it. It is extremely depressing to see your peers take early
retirement only to find out that the same package will not be available to you simply because you
are too young.
3. Improve and expand the medical coverage to include vision, hearing, and better dental
coverage. I recommend that UNI faculty receive the exact same health/dental insurance
coverage as University of Iowa faculty.
4. Provide faculty and their dependents tuition waivers!
5. Provide faculty free parking.
6. Provide faculty free access to the Wellness Center at all time. Restrict access to the Wellness
Center to faculty ONLY during the lunch hour.
7. Provide faculty more release times. UNI should strive to make the standard teaching load 6
hours per semester, like the University of Iowa. However, this 6 hour load should be provided
only to faculty who are exceptional researchers/publishers and faculty who are teaching large
classes.
8. Get rid of Friday classes. Change the class schedule to 1 hour and 15 minute classes two
days per week (TTh or MW). Reserve Fridays for classes that require more than 1 hr 15 mins
(labs), student club meetings, field trips, faculty meetings, etc.
9. Provide faculty a faculty club with lockers, showers, meeting rooms, lunch rooms, evening
meals, etc.
Thanks.
51 Individual
Here is my input on a couple of topics relating to the working climate and culture. First, regarding
why UNI is a good place to work:
I have found the support of my colleagues as a tenure-track faculty member to be quite high. I
have very supportive colleagues in my department who have offered their help and mentoring
graciously. I currently conduct research projects on a collaborative basis regularly with one of my
colleagues. The quality of people who are at this university is overall very high, and people are
typically genuinely helpful. I feel the majority of faculty and staff are committed to providing
students with a positive experience here at UNI.
It is encouraging to be at an institution that places high value on teaching. I took advantage of
services offered through the Center for the Enhancement of Teaching when I first came to UNI
and found them to be very helpful. The publishing-teaching balance will always exist, but I think I
am a better teacher in part because of my research, and a better researcher in part because of
my teaching. I have also found the opportunities to include students in on research projects,
particularly graduate students, to be generally very favorable.
UNI is also a campus that is appealing to the eye. The fact that it is clean and well-kept makes it
more pleasant to be on-campus. It isn't necessarily something one might think of...until they've
been to college campuses that are not well-kept.
Next, here are a few ideas I have regarding ways to improve the working climate and culture at
UNI, in no particular order of importance:
1. Free parking for full time faculty and staff.
2. Free membership to the WRC for full time faculty and staff. A membership to the CF Rec
Center can cost a fraction compared to belonging to the WRC.
3. Statistical support services. Ideally, have a statistical support person in each college.
Persons who conduct research in the hard sciences do not always thoroughly understand
research done in the social sciences and vice versa, making it somewhat difficult to communicate
about research design and statistical measures.
4. Re-instituting the Center for the Enhancement of Teaching, or set up some type of formal
mentoring process that can match up those who are known to be good teachers with new
incoming faculty or faculty who may struggle with teaching.
52 Individual
I believe that we need to do something with the parking on campus. I know that there is plans in
the works for a parking ramp over on the side of campus by Gilchrist. I used to work over there
and had very minimal problem finding parking there. Now I work over on the other side in Bartlett
and the parking situation is a nightmare. Out of five days a week I am lucky if I can get a parking
place in a lot 2 days. I believe that parking is an issue on that side of campus also. Thanks.
53 Individual
Sorry it took me so long to get back to you. My thoughts that I would like to see discussed during
Campus Conversation is a way that we can award our merit people. I think this is something we
really need to take a look at. By union contract, we cannot reward them more pay or time off.
From being a supervisor for a number of years, I have always been uncomfortable with not being
able to do something for my employees that go the extra mile compared to the employees that
just put in their eight hours. Just my thoughts and something to think about.
54 Individual
It's a great place to work for some of the same reasons that ALL universities are
great places to work: flex-time hours, great conversations with students and
colleagues, an atmosphere of inquiry, plenty of opportunities for engaging
subjects in depth, lectures, concerts, and a fair amount of undisturbed time.
It's kind of a utopia for thinking people, really.
That said, it could be even more stimulating:
--more opportunities and support for collaboration. I have done a fair amount
of this, but it was actually discouraged as being inconvenient, hard to schedule,
and expensive.
--return the Center for the Enhance of Teaching, or whatever it might be called
in a new incarnation. The "Qualities of an Educated Person" document came from
this group, and it was helpful to many people on many levels. Also support for
serious collaboration, help with people struggling with teaching issues, and so on.
It was crucial to making the campus more faculty-friendly.
--a faculty bar/lunchroom
--less nickel-and-diming for long distance calls, copying; we're shamefully cheap
about this, and it's demeaning.
Thanks for the opportunity to provide some input—
55 Individual
The number of great community outreach and involvement projects that UNI leads and
participates in... including Global Health Corps, free tax preparation from Accounting, Institute for
Decision Making, etc.
To keep improving UNI we need to expand the number of faculty and students that are engaged
in bettering our region.
Thanks for the opportunity to give input.
56 Individual
1. The University and Cedar Falls need to agressively address the deterioration of the
neighborhoods around the University. Parents and prospective students, faculty recruits, and
everyone who works here are influenced by the trash, run down houses, cars on lawns, wet
upolstered furniture on porches etc. etc. This is the mirror that UNI holds up regarding the quality
of life for us all. As old time pictures of the same neighborhood tell us, conditions were not
always that bad.
2. Academic Program Reviews should be managed on campus, not by the Regents.
3. A faculty club would be nice and a good recruiting tool.
57 Anonymous
This is probably an old one, but it has to do with the mainframe. Specifically, the process that
faculty have to go through to electronically lift advisor holds is so archaic and frustrating that
many of them stop trying. Now, I personally have developed a love-hate relationship w/
mainframe functions, but it seems like moving away from a system that has been in place for SO
long and certainly can't be called user-friendly deserves some attention.
58 Anonymous
Restore the Center for Enhancement of Teaching.
Enable increased funding for faculty development/professional activity so
that departments aren't burdened with having to squeeze that into their
budgets.
59 Individual
As ideas come to me, I will be forwarding them to the committee. Here are a couple:
Try harder to have departments eliminate individual flyers to each member of the
faculty/P&S/staff -- send one to the secretary and have it posted, since most of the flyers also
have info in UNIOnline and Northern Iowan and end up in the circular file.
Develop a form for catastrophic illness donations that can be linked to the Announcements
section of My Universe. Because everyone will be using that to fill out time sheets/absence
requests, and you need username and password to sign in, it should be similar to what is used for
parking permits.
60 Individual
I just have an overall observation. In the past couple of years, I have had the opportunity to visit
several other universities (mostly comprehensive institutions similar to us) conducting program
reviews or making guest presentations. My overall observation is that UNI is an outstanding
institution! Sometimes we don't realize how "good we have it", until we see what it is like at other
places.
This observation does not address Dr. Koob's question, but it is the context in which I work here
at UNI. In summary, the "quality of life" at UNI is already wonderful.
61 Anonymous
My one and very strong suggestion to improve the quality of life for faculty
(and heads) at UNI is to reinstate the Center for the Enhancement of
Teaching. This serves several crucial purposes. First, it is an excellent
source for our teachers who are struggling with their teaching. The office
has been responsible for helping bad teachers become adequate, and that is
an extraordiarily important function at UNI. Secondly, it provides a
community for probationary teachers who are working toward tenure. These
teachers need support and guidance, and they can get this through the center
-- making it more possible for their careers to flourish (and not be dragged
down with useless anxiety). Thirdly, it is an an excellent resource for
mid-career teachers, those who are good and even great teachers but who have
been teaching for so long that they are no longer sure they are doing
anything worthwhile. Often, such teachers feel isolated and just plain
pooped out. The center is a place where they can gather and work on
projects that invigorate them once again, igniting the fires of enthusiasm,
bringing back good and even great teachers in our midst. There is a fourth
possibility for the center: it could function as our key resource for
Student Outcomes Assessment -- the place that would put on workshops on SOA,
that might be able to coordinate all our SOA efforts on campus, and to which
each department could go for advice. The reason it could be located at this
center is that the one key thing we need to know is how effective our
teaching is in helping fulfill the goals of our majors, and the center would
be the appropriate place to go for help to figure out how we might best
achieve a good understanding of appropriate methods.
63 Anonymous
"What could make the lives of UNI Department Heads better?"
There needs a consistent administrative policy concerning employment. The entire process of
employment appears to be a good old boy’s network. Positions are filled all over the university
without national searches.
The budgets are maintained at the deans’ level or above and department heads have no
opportunity for long range budget planning or staff replacement. Monies from faculty retirements
are gobbled up immediately. The department heads often are not consulted concerning the full
distribution of merit monies.
There is no way to tell if we have support from the president’s office. It would be a nice gesture if
he would come out with another early retirement option. It appears that there was a considerable
cost savings with earlier efforts.
There is no equity within the university concerning department budgets and tremendous
inconsistencies concerning equipment, supplies and services budgets.
There appears to be no leadership from the upper administration except the overt manipulation of
monies towards athletics and favored programs.
64 Individual
In response to the question......."What could make the lives of UNI
dept. heads better?" I would have to answer, based on the events
happening in My Life at UNI in the past year or so, getting rid of the
Memfis program would be wonderful. This is a great example of
technology taking us a step backward. It has increased the workload for
me and our dept. secretary. We spend untold hours trying to resolve
problems and figure out what needs to be done to get things right. It
is a difficult, cumbersome, non intuitive, time consuming program. Life
was much better before Memfis came along.
Thanks for the opportunity to vent.
65 Individual
I think I am too new at this to suggest anything! Maybe making it easier to have two email
accounts (as you do)? Maybe offering more administrative support--ie those templates we are
supposed to be "publishing"--if they are by the catalog isn't there anyone else on campus who
could do the grunt work?
Just a couple of thoughts....
66 Individual
I came to this campus because of the collegiality. While many
workplaces SAY they have a collegial atmosphere, UNI is the first place
I have truly experienced it throughout the institution. This spirit
should be guarded and encouraged. With budget cutbacks, we are all
striving to run the campus efficiently and have therefore cut some
services and programs. But some of these have had the unexpected impact
of eliminating the opportunities for faculty and staff to interact in
the informal way that encourages collegiality. Faculty and staff are
increasingly bounded by their department's walls (whether by their own
choice or the outlook of the department).
My recommendation would be to consider new ways, coordinated but
informal ways, that connect people to one another. An existing formal
way is service on committees. This offers opportunities for colleagues
to meet, building relationships that go beyond the committee service.
But there are more informal methods. Faculty/staff clubs or dining
halls build the same type of collegiality. Many on campus miss the
Royal Oak Room for that reason. Another suggestion: non-lectures that
are entertaining, educational, and cross-cut disciplines would be a
combat-free zone for light-hearted, but enriching academic discussion.
Comfortable meeting places that encourage informal discussion (such as
departmental rooms that enforce the rule that anything but the
department's discipline can be discussed in that room). Perhaps
rotating these gatherings between more discipline-neutral zones on
campus (Rod Library, Museum, CEEE, Commons.....). It will probably
take a small group of like-minded souls to get this up and running. But
once it catches on, it will sustains itself.
Whatever tactic is used, this must have the support of the
administration. Faculty and staff must feel that collaboration,
inter-departmental discussion, and collegiality are important and
valuable to the long-term health of the campus. Without these aspects
of our working environment, creativity is stunted and isolation breds
animosity and unhealthy competition. If our mission is to provide a
strong liberal arts curriculum, then we must have faculty and staff that
look beyond their own departments and have a thirst for knowledge on a
broader spectrum.
67 Individual
It is a privilege to work at the University of Northern Iowa. The opportunities here are tremendous,
and I appreciate the administration's support. I feel strongly that UNI is only as good as it's faculty
and staff -- it is through them that we are able to serve our students and offer them the quality of
education they deserve. In that vein, I would like to suggest that faculty and staff are offered the
opportunity to improve their skills and expand their knowledge through tuition free opportunities to
take classes here at UNI. It's a win-win situation -- UNI benefits from having a highly educated
staff, students benefit in two ways - from the staff's ability to serve them even better, and from the
opportunity to interact with staff in a classroom setting and learn from staff experience. This would
also help staff be even more in touch with students, and offer them personalized experience from
a different viewpoint.
I've seen the P&S Council study that indicates many public universities across the nation are
offering tuition free for not only employees, but also their families. The recruiting benefit of this
would be valuable. If we want to attract not only the best and brightest students, but also faculty
and staff - these sorts of benefits would make UNI competitive.
Thank you for taking the time to consider what would make UNI an even better place to work and
study. This effort reflects why UNI is already a good place to be.
68 Anonymous
It's about time Koob met with the staff. His last statement at the Tuesday meeting was NOT
accurate - about meeting with any group that requests it. I know the AFSCME group has
requested it and he has always conveniently been "unavailable".
69 Anonymous
This new MEMFIS/Oracle system is a PAIN!!!! It has NOT made processing any easier or
streamlined for those in Academic Offices. Frankly, it just moved work out of Gilchrist [where
there is plenty of employess] to the individual deparments [where we have had more layoffs!].
There has been training for this new HR section but we were told at our session that there WILL
be changes to it by the time it goes "live". So why did I even go to a session when it wasn't even
accurate?!
Not everyone on campus has access to a secure/confidential computer and printer. [think of the
custodians, carpenters, groundskeepers, other physical plant employees]
The information on our payslip is PRIVATE I want to receive it in a SEALED ENVELOPE. It's bad
enough that a STUDENT [you call it an intern] is going to have access to MY
PRIVATE/CONFIDENTIAL information such as SS#, bank number; but to not even get this
information - it may be illegal that you don't provide me a hardcopy. What happens when the
server on campus goes down? [And that will happen with everyone trying to access this during
the same timeframe.]
70 Anonymous
It would be nice to have a staff dining area on campus. There are rooms in the Piazza - can one
be designated "Staff only"? I only have 1 hour for lunch. I try to stay on campus but it is difficult to
get through the lines at Piazza and then find a seat and have a relaxing meal with all that noise even if I go back by the waterfall. And forget the Union - it's way too noisy over there! I want to
get away from the hectic atmosphere so when I return from my lunch hour I'm refreshed and
ready for another 4 hours of chaos!
71 Anonymous
I feel there is a BIG need to encourage early retirement. The University has many outstanding
employees that have worked for many years and are earning the top wages. Instead of "cutting"
at the bottom (the newly hired), who don't make much, they should encourage more senior staff
to retire early to help offset this imbalance in employee wages. I also feel the University needs to
work with the union and get rid of the "bumping" procedure. It ends up costing the University
more money to "retrain" all of the staff effected by the bump downs. Merit staff effected by these
bumps, are left in limbo for weeks on end not knowing where they will end up. This is a terrible
way to work. It's not only life altering and stressful for the staff member affected, but it also effects
all staff working with that person. "Playing with people's lives", like they were puppets to pull this
way and that....makes for a very terrible place to work. The people affected by these
cuts, tell family and friends about all the difficulties working at UNI and that does not look good for
public relations!
72 Anonymous
University employees should not be made to pay for parking. We are required to be here every
day to provide services for the students. If the University has so much money for "construction"
projects, they need to build a parking ramp for staff only and not charge for parking! The
University is so worried about "Students First", does it think much of it's staff? Instead of a yearly
picnic on the weekend that most of us cannot attend anyway, especially those of us who live out
of town, they should have a "true" University Staff Appreciation Day on a workday! Where staff
can go to the picnic during work hours. I've always wanted to attend, but Saturdays never work!
73 Anonymous
We need development opportunities for the Merit staff. Something other than the AEOP
Workshop days and something other than ITS workshops.
Additionally, it would be helpful for department heads to develop management skills and
supervisory skills. I am appalled at the skill levels, or lack thereof, of department managers that
are unable to handle personnel problems.
Why are faculty allowed to not show up with no recourse to them? Why are they not held to their
contract and have to report absences such as sick leave?
Why are faculty allowed to decide NOT to learn how to use MEMFIS?
74 Anonymous
I've been at UNI for almost 6 years and this is the FIRST time I've been aware of President Koob
approaching the Merit staff. I find this highly suspicious, especially since this is his evaluation
year.
No one has ever been interested in our comments before! And you really expect us to believe this
is sincere!
75 Anonymous
A very important contribution to enhancing UNI as a workplace would be greater leadership from
the President’s office in the area of diversity. Even the name of the office—Compliance and
Equity Management—suggests a narrow mandate. At UNI, we focus apparently only on
compliance and management of equity. We apparently offer the university community no
proactive leadership and vision. The difference between the Office for Compliance and Equity
Management at UNI and the Office of Equal Opportunity and Diversity at the U. of Iowa is striking.
The office at Iowa, headed by Charlotte Westerhaus, is grounded in explicit leadership goals that
stem from the President’ s office:
1) providing expert advice, education, and services which ensures the University's compliance
with all applicable federal, state, and University equal opportunity, affirmative action,
nondiscrimination, and civil rights laws, regulations, and policies, and
2) providing leadership and
resources that support the University's goal to foster a diverse and inclusive University
community. At the U. of Iowa, compliance is only a piece of a larger office commitment to build a
more inclusive community and provide the U. of Iowa community with the resources to do so. At
UNI, our Multicultural Coordinating Council is making a strong effort to implement diversity goals
on campus. However, its work would be facilitated by a model of diversity leadership not focused
only on “managing” equity but also on proactive and constructive engagement with diversity goals
and vision. The narrow commitment to “manage” diversity rather than create/promote diversity at
UNI very much weakens the campus community.
Graduate education is central to the strength of UNI. However, the decentralized budget has not
been good for graduate education in recent years. Not every college makes graduate education
a priority and some colleges have been unwilling to take up the budget slack that has weakened
graduate education. The budget crisis has not been good for graduate education in other ways:
cuts have significantly damaged the capacity of faculty to deliver high quality graduate education.
One key to excellence in graduate education at UNI is strong mentoring of students. However,
when coordinators have no release time, mentoring declines in quality and in quantity.
Excellence also requires that we be competitive with other universities for students. Our
assistantship stipends are not adequate to accomplish that goal. While adding graduate
programs to serve an emerging adult population that needs MA credentialing is a worthy goal, we
also need to provide financial support to existing
graduate programs when they exhibit a commitment to quality that would attract strong students,
were those programs to be in the position also to support them financially. I encourage the
development of a graduate education plan that will reward with enhanced resources to existing
graduate programs that have made a demonstrated commitment to quality. Graduate education
will also benefit from a renewed commitment to “best practices” in all facets of graduate
education. Implementation of “best practices” has been episodic and sporadic here. ‘
Enhanced support for faculty research will also make UNI a much better place to work. Travel
funds have been cut in recent years at every level, including the graduate college. Faculty need
to travel to be competitive in our fields. PDAs are critical to faculty. While faculty need to be
accountable for their proposals, a level of competition that pits faculty against each other for
support is counterproductive to university quality. Faculty who author solid proposals need to be
able to count on regular access to PDAs to support their research. Moreover, funding needs to
be sufficient so that deans do not respond to faculty who have been successful in receiving PDAs
with disappointment and disapproval. One dean regularly complains when faculty ask for his
signature on their proposals and complains again, should they be successful with their proposal,
about the problems their success will pose to his need to staff their courses.
Each fall, new department heads need to be offered an in-service (coordinated jointly by UF and
Academic Affairs) on collective bargaining. In recent years, faculty have had to spend significant
amounts of time educating misinformed department heads about contractual matters. Even when
department heads respond in an open and receptive manner, faculty time should not be taken up
with this task. Department heads need to know the contract and their role in complying with it up
front.
76 Anonymous
I am concerned about the prices for parking that were quoted in the parking survey. I am a single
mom working 6 hours per day for 9 months. If the price for parking goes up to the prices in the
survey, I won't be able to afford to park on campus.
I am also concerned about the new timecard system. I was told that we would no longer be
getting a paper copy of our deposit statement. If I don't get a paper copy, I amy consider going
back to getting a check instead of direct deposit. That way I will get a paper copy of my check and
all my deductions.
I would also like to get paid every 2 weeks llike the students.
78 Individual
I would like to see more ability for flex time. I know that there are several professors and P&S
staff that use this to their advantage. We may not be in the same pay scale or have exactly the
same benefits, but I believe that the Merit staff work just as hard or harder and should be able to
use flex time as well. There are a lot of us that work through our lunches and do not even take
breaks but we are unable to use this to our advantage for flex time.
I would also like to see early retirement come back. If they are looking for ways to cut money,
this would be one way. Early retirement with insurance. There would be a lot of secretaries that
are close to retirement, jump at something like this. There were be a tremendous amout of cost
savings in the long run. People are needing to look at the big picture when they are cutting
money and jobs.
79 Individual
In addition to what I wrote in an earlier email, I thought of one more very practical thing that would
benefit most UNI employees, whether faculty, administrators, P&S staff, or merit staff. We
receive many many requests for this in the Wellness and Recreation Services office and I expect
that the GBPAC, Athletic, and other offices do as well.
There is high demand that payroll deductions of large amounts (like GPAC season tickets, WRS
user fees, athletic tickets, etc) be spread out automatically over 10 months or so. With more and
more of these payments hitting fall, especially the large GPAC season tickets, we in the WRS
office and I'm sure others are getting lots of requests/complaints about the stress on the
Aug/Sept/Oct paychecks. When I have asked the Business Office about this, I am told that this
should be possible with Oracle. I would request that this committee follow up on this to make
sure that this, in deed, will be opeartional by next fall.
I believe in many cases it isn't the isolated cost of various activities/services that offensive to UNI
employees, but the fact that they all must be paid in the first couple months of the school year.
Added together they can eat up most of a paycheck.
Thanks for considering this.
80 Individual
I find it rather disheartening to see managers, students or non, talking for long periods of time
while on the clock.
The non-managers are reminded to work hard, get lots of things done, etc. but when it comes
down to it, watching or even hearing others talk aimlessly for hours about what they did the night
before or what they're doing tonight doesn't make me not want to work hard--but really ticked off.
On another note, I really like it that we're moving to payroll system (MEMFIS) that allows us to get
our paychecks every-other-week.
I think the pay that I get for what I do is rather low. $6.00/hr. is not really that great when you
consider what I do. As a STAR in the admissions office, I talk with hundreds of prospective
students a day. If you really ananlyze the importance of the job, you might see how raising the
hourly wage is a good idea.
Guidance counselors in the admissions office only talk with students directly when the
prospective student has a question or a problem with something (i.e., high school transcript). I
actually get to talk to the student and largely what I say and how I say it is what determines
whether or not the student will keep UNI on his/her short list of schools.
In addition, I would like to thank all those that have made this survey possible--I know how much
work things like this can take.
81 Individual
1) It serves neither the students nor the faculty who have to teach them to
require students whose initial experience in college was unsuccessful to
retake courses in calculus, physics, and chemistry in order to raise their
GPA, when they have discovered that their interests and aptitude lie in
philosophy. We could modify the cumulative GPA used as a graduation
requirement, while still keeping standards which allow warning, probation,
and suspension prior to graduation. This would provide a better atmosphere
for faculty, because they would have students who are interested in what they
are teaching, not frustrated students hopelessly trying to correct a mistake
they made before.
Indeed we have had students in math who dropped out and then returned, with
interests changed from pure math to math teaching, and we have advised them
to retake a pure math course to get their GPA up, rather than take the
teacher education version of the course which would have served them (hence
the state of Iowa) better.
For purposes of graduation, students could designate which courses count
toward graduation (satisfying the major, any minors, and the 120 or higher
hour requirement for the degree). Then the GPA would be calculated based on
those courses.
For purposes os warning, probation, suspension; the GPA of all courses
enrolled in a given semester would be looked at with one low semester
mandating warning, two consecutive low semesters mandating probation, and
three consecutive low semesters mandating suspension.
A second change which also primarily benefits the student is to remove the
user fee for the WRC which is charged faculty and staff. The administration
can provide how much money in user fees comes from faculty and staff (we may
have to be careful we have the correct term for the access fee so we get the
correct information. The benefit for students would be more informal
interaction with faculty. When I came to UNI, it was a regular occurrence
for faculty and students to compete together in volleyball tounaments in the
PEC. Since the user fee has been instituted, faculty are discouraged from
entering the facility. Inasmuch as the administration took away the right of
faculty to use the swimming pools and PEC without negotiating the change,
reinstituting those rights can be done outside of collective bargaining.
You will note that the first suggestion is essentially no cost, and the second
suggestion is low cost.
82 Individual
UNI is a great place to work because the people who make it hum treat it like it's a minicommunity wherein all members know each other and care that the best things happen for each
other. There is an appropriate amount of tough love for students--helping correct errors but giving
a lesson at the same time and helping them move forward. Faculty and staff go out of their way
(especially staff) to help people do their jobs. UNI people seem to truly understand that we are a
connected web, and that if one part has a hole in it, then we just can't catch any flies.
What makes UNI great is that we keep being asked to participate in making it better--like right
now. We have a president who understands the power of minds AND ideas and knows the
differences and similarities.
The tone at UNI always seems to be, "How can we make this more people friendly and
effective?" rather than, "How can we make this product or save that dollar?" Products and
resources are important, but they are not the goal.
How to make UNI a better place. I have to start with myself and make sure that my attitude is
always on straight. Another is to realize that with increasing demands for content knowledge
coming from national organizations and State accreditation departments, we are going to have to
add hours to students' programs. We can't keep stuffing a gallon of water into a cup. We've been
trying to do that for over 15 years at UNI while institutions around us face the fact and meet the
demands by adding hours. I site this problem because, until we solve it, our faculty will continue
to burn out, and no improvements for students will be evident. We need to also think about
"faculty first." I call it the "oxygen mask theory:" if our faculty aren't healthy and happy, their
students aren't going to be, either. We need to protect faculty from trying to meet students' needs
by providing so much individual attention to students who are coming in more poorly prepared
and who cannot pick up extra content as smoothly as other students. I see many faculty giving up
research time and service time to tutor less able students. While this is a wonderful attribute, it
also kills off faculty and programs. We need to be sensitive to how much our faculty can sacrifice
every day.
Otherwise, it's, "Go Panthers!"
83 Individual
What makes UNI a great place to work?
Let me begin by saying that I was a faculty member at other universities before coming to UNI, so
I have a basis for comparison . . .
One of the things that has particularly made this a great experience is the sense of common
purpose to serve students. Throughout my career here, there have been occasions when there
were things I needed done so that I could do my job better . . . things that I could not do myself. I
cannot think of an occasion when I called upon others to help me when that help was not
enthusiastically forthcoming. In the Registrar's office Phil Patton, Patty Rust, Doug Koschmeder,
Sharon Graber, Rosann Good and others, in computer services Vergestene Cooper, Ken
Connelly, in instructional technology Phil Hibbard and Sandy Hendrickson, in our Dean's office
Mary-Sue Bartlett, our custodians Robin, Steve, Richard, Dave, and others, Elaine Dalrymple in
mail services and others.
My point, beyond recognizing the efforts of the aforementioned (and others whose contributions I
have forgotten), is that there is a sense of community and common purpose here. When I have
needed the help of others to perform better in my job, that help was provided enthusiastically. I
have always been left with a feeling that people in all job functions here at UNI viewed
themselves as part of a team working together for a common good.
What would make UNI a better place to work?
The root of my answer is money, and I don't think that is going to be resolved in the balance of
my career. When I arrived here 26 years ago, the appearance of the University was not very
appealing. For example, I remember the pillars at the entrance to the University at 23rd and
College were eroding - bricks were loose and dislodged. That was representative of the
University as a whole. Over the next two decades the University became a figurative sparkling
diamond, physically and programmatically. The last four years have diminished the University. I
think the efforts of University leaders, faculty and staff have been heroic and the substance and
spirit of UNI have been retained in large measure, but it is not the University it was, and will not
be again during my career, perhaps my lifetime. That saddens me. Three of Iowa's greatest
attributes are the work ethic, its soil, and the schools, including UNI. That we have great soil is by
chance, that the work ethic is strong is a product of our history and culture. Only the quality of
our educational institutions could be diminished so severely in such a short time. That it has
been allowed to happen is so disheartening
. . . reversing that circumstance is what would make this a better place to work . . . and that is not
possible, I fear.
That said, I still think things are better here than most other universities.
84 Individual
1. What makes UNI a great place to work?
First and # 1 .....the students.
Second......my colleagues
2. What would make it better?
Increased communication
A more specific "reward and expectation" system
85 Individual
For me, quality of life has a lot to do with being able to optimally teach my classes, and do
research. In order to do so, I need an updated computer every couple of years. The program we
used to have throught the Provost's office fullfilled that need.
86 Individual
What makes UNI a great place to work?
UNI has always placed a major focus on serving Iowa and Iowa schools. The relationships we
are able to build with K-12 educators makes UNI a great place to work and develops
ambassadors for UNI in Iowa schools. We are looked to by practitioners as rich resources of
support and expertise. They see as partners in education and truly appreciate the contributions
we make to education preK-16.
The University of Northern Iowa allows us to use our interests, knowledge and skills to best serve
the state of Iowa. It is my sense that the Board of Regents hold in high regard our role in higher
education.
87 Individual
UNI is a great place to work for many reasons. I have literally grown up on this campus, walking
through campus to the Lab school K-12; completing my BA and MA in Health Education; and
working as the Wellness Resource Coordinator from 1997 to 2001, and HPELS Instructor since
2001. Here are some of the things I like best about UNI employment:
1) Government employee benefits, especially the health and dental, and TIAA Cref when I was
P&S
2) Opportunity to further education (staff development grants for P&S, in particular)
3) Opportunity to learn from others on and off campus through lectures, events, etc.
4) Special promotions of athletic and other on campus events to employees
5) Encouragement to become involved with community
^) Opportunity to express opinion to Administration
Things that would make employment better:
1) Expanded Grants and Contract office to handle increased external funding
2) Facilitating better communication and flexibility between departments, in particular related to
grant-related accounts/employees
3) Opportunity to achieve permanent job status as Instructor after proving worth (perhaps setting
a timeline and examining teaching evals) With tenured faculty focused on research, Instructors
play a significant role in focusing on classroom teaching . Ideally, Instructor's curriculum should
benefit from tenured faculty research. It is apparent that not every tenured faculty is effective at
both research and classroom teaching. 4) Address the parking issues on campus. Even though I
pay for A parking, whenever the Dome hosts events, such as State Playoffs, I'm lucky to find any
space to park. Someone is making money from parking fees for visitors to the events, but
employees who pay premium price for parking spaces do not have designated spots during these
event times. That should be rectified. (I am very supportive of the new parkin ramp on central
campus)
5) While it is unlikely that things will ever change, there should be a way to eliminate ineffective
faculty. It is even difficult to eliminate faculty who have yet to gain tenure status. Students are
paying more and more tuition, and deserve to have at least adequate instruction. This is not
always the case, and it should be an embarrassment to the Administration that these situations
exist. However, I understand that politics play a significant role, and that perhaps all we can hope
for is some of the poor classrroom teachers will either retire early, or find other jobs.
88 Individual
UNI is a great place to work....
there is a lot of foot traffic on both sides of Hudson Road
students walking to school, people attending events at the dome, UNI students walking to the
track
and of course....some people work at UNI and walk to work along Hudson Road
It would be great to have a sidewalk between W. 19th and W. 23rd on the East side of Hudson
and a sidewalk just north of the dome parking lot on the West side to the entrance of the "pink
palaces"
At one time, there was supposed to be a planned bike path along Hudson Road, but I don't know
if funds were cut or what has happened to that idea
maybe UNI could work with the City to make this happen
thanks for listening
89 Anonymous
The university has faculty and P&S awards but nothing for the merit staff. I would like to see an
award developed for them. Maybe 2 awards would be needed. One recipient would be
nominated by students and the other would be nominated by faculty/staff. We have so many
great merit employees who go out of their way to make the lives of our students and faculty
easier, it's time to recognize them!
90 Individual
To Whom it May Concern:
What makes UNI Great:
* The sense of community within the University
* The administration and thier concern for all programs
* The community of Cedar falls and Waterloo
* Great students to work with
* The focus on improving facilities
* The mentorship of new faculty
* The orientation for new faculty
* The excitement for success felt across the campus
* The autonomy to make our curricula better
* The autonomy to utilize our specialization to make UNI great
* The faculty picnic each year, it is awesome
What would make it better:
* All Faculty being able to utilize the WRC for free
* All Faculty being able to take classes for free
* Faculty families and spouses given a discount to continue thier
education
I think UNI is an awesome place to work. Having four kids and wanting them to go to school is
my only concern for the future. I think if you UNI can help in that area some of the younger
faculty will never leave.
Thanks for letting us have some input.
91 Individual
*/What makes UNI a great place to work? /* The daily interaction I have with students is what
makes me enjoy my job here at UNI. Being around young people is invigorating. I often feel that
I am "mom" to the hundreds of students who live here in the building where I work. I truly feel
part of a "community" working here at UNI. My peers and subordinates are warm and friendly
people whom I enjoy spending time with. I am also appreciative to have a job which allows me to
have my summers off to spend time with my own children.
/*What would make it better?* / It would be wonderful if the University could figure out a way to
eliminate the parking fee employees must pay. I am especially concerned about this if the
parking garage goes in in the Gilchrist A lot in the near future. I worked for a government
contractor while living in St. Louis, Missouri and they paid the parking fee for their employees.
This benefit was greatly appreciated. I also think that merit increases should not be delayed for
employees who don't work 12 months per year. The calculation done by Payroll to determine the
date when an increase should occur is very confusing (nearly impossible) to understand.
I appreciate the opportunity to share my thoughts on the above questions.
92 Individual
1) What makes UNI a great place to work?
I like the focus UNI has on students. I see faculty challenged daily in
having enough time for students with all other responsibilities, but overall
I think students benefit coming to UNI because of the focus of students
first. I hope that continues and improves.
2) What would make it better?
Collaboration of faculty would make UNI better. Even within the same
division faculty are not always supportive of others work and other
programs. Faculty often have their own agenda, and if it contradicts
other's goals and agenda so be it. I work for a program that, in my
perspective is rarely supported by other faculty in my division. This
challenge contributes to my short answer above.
I also think continued UNI's continued involvement in the community is
needed. This is improving, but we can still make great strides.
93 Anonymous
1) Provide close, convenient staff parking at low or no cost; separate from student parking.
2) If staff parking fee, adjust it according to working status. Hours have been cut to 1/2 or 3/4
time, yet still pay full parking price.
3) Enforce accountability of P&S staff. They are over-priviledged and severely abuse work
times (arrive late AND leave early, leave work for haircuts and personal errands, etc.)and are not
required to be accountable for lost work time. Then feel it is their right to delegate their work to
merit people for what they could not complete, or even start in most cases.
4) On top of #3, P&S receive too much vacation compared to merit staff.
5) Update merit staff positions to reflect current, modernized titles.
6) Update merit vacation leave to current standards. For years nearly every company provides 3
weeks vacation upon hire; have to wait 4 years with our current system to receive that.
7) Shut down for spring break and Thanksgiving week. Savings to the university would be
substantial.
94 Anonymous
Expand PDAs to include learning and service opportunities, as well as research opportunities
Maintain/improve medical insurance coverage including: mental health coverage parity,
major/catastrophic coverage (e.g. hospitalization), preventive measures (e.g. dieticians, arch
supports), etc.
95 Anonymous
Acknowledge UNI service anniversaries for all faculty, merit, confidential, and P &S employees
(for example with gold-tone UNI lapel pin given at first year & amethysts added each 5-year
anniversary)
96 Anonymous
I think UNI is doing better at reaching out to the Cedar Valley community. As a faculty member I
would appreciate having some release time (for example, 10 hours a semester) for service in the
metropolitan area schools that might not be tied directly to our areas of responsibility here at UNI.
I am a volunteer with Take Charge of Your Body and provide sexual abuse prevention education
through the Family & Childrens' Council. I understand that I need to "make up my time" in order
to provide this needed community service.
‘
97 Individual
Eliminante the parking fee. Building a new parking ramp may be desirable, but the cost to use as
projected for faculty and staff (and perhaps students as well) will be demoralizing. Substantially
reduce (or eliminate) the cost for attendance at university athletic events and performances (e.g.,
Gallager-Bluedorn).
‘
Eliminate the extra fee for the wellness center - only real costs like towel fee etc.
Establish some sort of social interaction environment (social club) for faculty and staff (akin to
what was tried a few years back with the periodic luncheons). Cross-campus conversations are
lacking as there is little direct opportunity for such to take place. There may be a place for a
faculty and staff variety show.
Facilitate cross-disciplinary curricular exploration and development.
Re-establish a dining facility similar to the former Royal Oak room.
98 Individual
More Green!!!
I realize that it may be more cost effective to eliminate areas that need to be mowed, seeded,
watered etc. but enough with the helicopter landing pads at the center of this campus! If we
continue to try to pave every inch that is stepped upon this campus will look like a gray desert.
Here's a story for you that I swear is true. I was walking between the Library and the Union this
summer and crossed paths with a family that appeared to be on a campus visit. Mom, Dad,
teenage boys, and a little girl about 4 years old. The little girl was jumping up and down, turning
in circles and I heard her ask, "Daddy, Daddy, is this where the airplane lands?"
I rest my case!
99 Individual
I would like to see picnic table spread throughout the University so students, staff and faculty can
enjoy lunch under the shade trees.
Would also like to see another Early Retirement offered for 55 and older
100 Anonymous
We have great benefits and a lovely campus to work on and enjoy. There are great sporting and
cultural events to see. I appreciate Dr. Koob's openness and the opportunity to give comments
and suggestions. The rigid bureaucratic structure tends to dampen creativity in our area. There
is no upward evaluation of our supervisors, except for the Dean every 5 years. Some of our
administrators have a class hierarchy orientation. The parking facility is a good idea, but I would
hope staff fees would be lowered instead of raised. Thanks for this opportunity!
101 Anonymous
I really do enjoy working at UNI; this is absolutely where I want to be. Unfortunately, this has been
a difficult place for me to work, due to conflicts with my supervisor. I have sought assistance from
human resources and from people higher up in the division, but I have never been able to resolve
these issues. I don't think my supervisor is actually speaking to me, which makes it extremely
difficult to complete many tasks. We need more systems in place to address these issues,
perhaps an informal mediation system. I have considered the grievance process, but I think that
will only worsen the situation. Additionally, the evaluation system needs to be enforced; without
that functioning, it is impossible to know where you stand when your supervisor refuses to
communicate with you.
102 Individual
Thanks for the opportunity to give input. I have worked at several colleges over the past 20 or so
years and felt great when I was hired at UNI. Coming here I thought how impersonal this big
university would be but soon found out that was not the case. People are very friendly and
helpful. I have recently started working in the SSC and one of the advantages I have found was
to meet so many new people from so many different areas, learn about their department and their
job, and by doing so, have a person and a name to give a student who has a specific problem in
one of these areas. That improves are service to our students by being able to direct them to a
specific person, perhaps even making a phone call for them. As far as improvements go, I think it
would be nice to try to get all staff together more than once a year at the Luncheon in January. I
think a time to interact with other staff is always a good thing. Thanks.
103 Individual
1. The issue of parking fees should be re-evaluated. Fee is very steep for employees to park at
their place of work when it is UNI that has hired the employee. This should be a benefit rather
than a liability.
2. There are Department Heads, Directors AND Faculty that use their frequent flier miles towards
personal vacations. It should be determined that whenever anyone flying for UNI and they "rack"
up free miles these free miles should be put in one UNI fund to help defray costs throughout
campus. When travel is needed a pre-percentage allocation should be expended to the UNI
employee.
3. The Family Picnic funding should be ceased; or the money/gift should be distributed in some
other way that involves each and every employee. Many employees live out of town or the picnic
date doesn't fit into their schedule. Or the money might be transferred into a payroll fund to assist
in employee not getting laid off. I sure there are other ideas to include everyone.
4. Department Heads and Directors should be held accountable for their time. Many do not get
checked on their time management activity. Not that the Dean's need to micromanage but the
higher level authorities do not set by example with double standards taking place throughout our
campus community.
5. Turn off GBDPAC lights when not in use.
104 Anonymous
"What makes UNI a great place to work?" It's a place where employees genuinely care about
students and there welfare. My colleagues (both within my department and across campus) are
top notch and they greatly add to my job satisfaction.
"What would make it better?" I am a long-time UNI employee (13 years) and absolutely love my
job and my institution (which also happens to be my Alma Mater). However, I will likely be
applying for a position elsewhere because I have 5 kids to put through college and UNI does not
offer any tuition reduction/assistance for an employee's dependents. This is a fringe benefit that
is commonly provided at Community Colleges and private colleges, and perhaps the other
Regents institutions as well.
105 Individual
This would be a truly fantastic place to work if we had tuition waivers/scholarships for staff and
family.
106 Individual
We need to encourage change of the workstation environment in several campus areas to one
that permits individual faculty and staff to install software thus enabling each person to readily
experiment with and integrate technology into their individual endeavors.
107 Individual
UNI is by far the best environment I have worked in. The flexibility and intellectual challenges of
a university job are unmatched. This campus is a stimulating and welcoming environment for all
individuals associated with UNI. I am proud to be a UNI graduate, and proud to have an
opportunity to return here and develop my career.
The one change that would make UNI and even better place to work would be full tuition
reimbursement for staff members and their families. I have a strong desire to pursue a graduate
degree, but the cost is prohibitive at this time. Earning my undergraduate degree from UNI
showed me the value of the high quality programs offered at this university. There are many
others like me that would be grateful for an opportunity to continue their education for their
personal benefit as well as for the betterment of the university.
Thank you for providing an opportunity for the campus community to express their feelings and
ideas.
108 Individual
I have several issues for discussion:
1. The University is made up of 3 employee groups - faculty, P & S, and merit.
The merit employees do not get the respect they deserve. UNI could not
function without merit employees. I know we are not as educated but we do
our jobs well and should not be put down. Not all faculty treat us this way
as there are exceptions. UNI needs to promote all three groups as equals
when talking about how the University is run and the importance each group
plays at UNI.
2. The merit pay matrix needs to be looked at. Our salaries and benefits are
great. However with the matrix we have once you reach the end of your
scale, you no longer receive merit increases. Some of us have worked for
years with no merit pay. This is bad for the moral and gives us no
incentive to put extra effort into our positions. Most of us are conscientious
and like to do a job well so we go over and beyond in our jobs but it would
be nice to have something to works toward. Knowing we have an
opportunity for merit increases gives us better attitudes towards doing a job
well. The faculty always receive merit increases. Can't some monies be
put aside for merit as well?
3. Along the same lines, we have not received any recognition for learning the
MEMFIS. This was a huge undertaking by some of us. Others have
adapted well but it was really hard for some. We deserve to be recognized
for having to learn all of this. A lot of us have no background or experience
in accounting procedures such as this involves.
4. I would like to see the parking situation changed. We should get a break
for the amount we have to pay for a sticker. We pay a lot now and that
does not guarantee us a spot to park. That does not seem fair. The price
for stickers seems high.
5. Also we should get a price break for athletic tickets, GBPAC tickets, etc.
Why do we have to pay so much for using the Wellness Center? Can't
we get a reduced price there also? It is such a beautiful facility and we
should be able to take advantage of it.
6. Can Fridays be designated as informal? Some offices do and some don't.
It would be nice to have a campus wide policy so we would all feel
comfortable.
7. I enjoy the fall picnic - hope it does not get cancelled.
109 Anonymous
I would like to see development some Campus "Community Service" events that would develop a
greater sense of ownership and responsibility for campus facilities and its environment- ie. spring
clean up afternoon of the two branches of Dry Run Creek that run through campus. A clean up
day for the neighborhood adjacent to campus after spring move out. With a potluck afterward.
Faculty/staff sports leagues for volleyball, softball, etc. (departmental teams) to promote
interdepartmental communications.
Promote annual departmental open houses for support units, so that others on campus can gain
an appreciation for what they do and the role they play in the university.
110 Individual
What makes UNI a great place to work?
Generally, really nice facilities.
Some very talented faculty.
Good students.
A pretty good library.
The GBPAC and what it brings to the campus and community.
Competent support staff.
What would make it better?
Job 1: More emphasis on the central intellectual/educational mission of the university.
For example: I'm really disturbed at how much emphasis on intercollegiate athletics has grown
over the past ten years. There are so many academic programs that need more funding, yet the
bulk of the fundraising efforts go toward sports and sports facilities. This is not a huge community
-- there are only so many funds to go around, and I'm particularly disturbed as someone who
teaches in Communication Studies that a number of potential media-related prospects have been
tapped for major gifts to the McLeod Center and other athletic facilities, while media production
facilities still go unfunded (almost $1 million worth) years after the renovation of Lang was
completed. (I'm sure other academic programs could make similar complaints, too.) There is
another model to the pom-pom waving approach to gaining support for a university -- try the
University of Chicago, Case Western, or Washington University which have academic excellence
without reducing the university's identity to its athletic stature. If UNI really sees itself as the
major entertainment center of the region, then what the hell, let's build an IMAX theatre, an
amusement park, and big lake and call it UNIversityLand.
One could argue that the GBPAC is part of this same entertainment complex thing, but I think that
lovely facility integrates better with the university's academic programs and with the university's
INTELLECTUAL mission. Let's stick to things that contribute the most to the academic bottom
line (not just the financial bottom line).
In fact, the intellectual mission side seems to be so much in the background of things. So often,
I find the campus and campus life to be pleasant, but not intellectually stimulating. Much of the
student entertainment (speakers, etc.) are more entertaining than intellectually provocative. (This
trend is not unique to UNI, but we are masters of our own fate here.) A university should be a
place where people are challenged with new ideas, new ways of thinking. I know the "Student's
First" motto is a marketing slogan, but it's got it all wrong. It seems to set us up to pander to
students' every wish. Yes, it should be comfortable here, but I feel like my unstated mission
becomes how to help students get "A"s so they can get a degree, get a job, and settle down to a
life where they buy lots of stuff.
Does UNI have a reputation as a tough, challenging school? No. To make this a better place to
work (at least for faculty), make it a better university, quality-wise. Expect more of students. Be
more creative with the curriculum: require that students work on community projects, applying
their academic knowledge in a positive way. The curriculum is SO stuffy and safe, and there are
few university-wide ventures that fund experimentation. So many interesting things get killed in
the conservative, two-year curriculum cycle. I think both students and faculty would be excited to
engage in an entire semester that focused on just one or two classes worth 12-15 credit hours.
That would allow them to delve deeply into a subject, more than ever before.
One way to attract better faculty: Have regular sabbaticals, not competitive PDAs. Have a pretenure sabbatical for tenure-track faculty. Have a university-wide policy to promote the hiring of
domestic partners (I've seen a lot of great people leave UNI because of this). Fundraise to recruit
better faculty. Enable departments to grant leaves or reduced teaching loads to their most
productive researchers/creative artists. (There is SO LITTLE done to foster and reward
excellence at the faculty level. It's almost as if it doesn't make any difference here.)
Those are just a few ideas. Good luck!
111 Anonymous
What makes UNI a great place to work is the size of the institution--large enough to have enough
resources but small enough to get to know people around campus.
112 Anonymous
I enjoy working with the students and our friendly staff. The growth potential at campus not only
benefits the students but also faculty and staff.
What would make UNI a better place....the only thing that comes to my mind is remembering
students first...keep an open mind....there is a time and a place for no. We need to make sure
the students feel included and important...because they are.
113 Individual
Merit employee Conversation—
UNI is a great place to work. I think my Merit colleagues would agree. I believe the enthusiasm
our students show in their quest for knowledge and personal/professional life preparation rubs off
on everyone. The students keep us young and optimistic about the future. A big plus for me is to
help students from other backgrounds and cultures. Another asset is the older, nontraditional
student. This individual may share life challenges such as children and financial commitment yet
be studying also. It is important for us to give them support and encouragement.
I look back at my 20 years on campus with a sense of accomplishment and pride. As a single
parent not receiving child support, I am truly grateful to AFSCME for negotiating the wages and
benefits for me to adequately meet my daughter’s needs.
However, I would like to see more perks for the “senior” staff. One would be rather inexpensive.
Each January, a list could be posted on UNI Online of which employees had marked milestones
the previous year, 10, 15, 20 or more years with UNI. Or simply list groups of employees sorted
by ID number, as those are based on seniority. Or possibly honor active employees with more
than 25 years service at the retirement breakfast.
Another is tuition reduction for our children, 10% for employees with 10 years, 15% for 15 years,
and so forth. Or possibly a tuition rebate, similar to how the employee tuition grants work. I’d like
to see reduced parking and Wellness Center fees for senior employees. Perhaps we could
choose between free football or Theatre UNI or GBPAC tickets. Thank you for the November 13
tickets, the game was great!
I will soon have $35 per month taken from my paycheck to donate to the Foundation. I’m sure
this does make work for staff in Foundation Accounting, but it allows me to make a difference
without having to come up with the money all at once. If our contributions to UNI and United Way
can be set up like this, why can’t parking permits and Wellness Center fees?
I and a few other secretaries have experienced a quick turnover in number of Department Heads,
Directors, etc. we have worked for. The Department secretary is critical and central to training
each new head. I “broke in” new department heads in January 1999, August 2000, and January
2003. I transferred to my current department in October 2003, and began working with a new
head again in August 2004. As I am now becoming a seasoned veteran and working with
someone I greatly admire, this latest transition is going the smoothest by far. If there is $4500
extra compensation for being an Acting Head, I strongly feel there should be at least $1,000 extra
compensation for the Departmental Secretary, who will be most impacted by the changes. Also,
if we find ourselves helping out with graduate programs when the coordinator is gone for an
extended period, additional compensation should be in order. If the coordinator receives extra
compensation or travel funds, why is it just one more duty for the secretary?
So far, I feel that the training process with MEMFIS has gone well. If we make the effort to attend
the workshops and ask questions, it works. Those individuals who have put much work into
planning the workshops have done a first-rate job. Huge KUDOS to both those persons we see
at the meetings and those computer programmers behind the scenes that make it all work. My
only complaint about MEMFIS is requiring supplier setup forms for vendors we will only use once.
Someday the supplier database will be clogged with so many individuals not even needed
anymore.
One idea I have considered for several years is a voluntary reduction of my hours over the
summer. Yes, there is still work to be done then. We offer summer school courses in May, there
are faculty merit and salary letters in June, the end of one fiscal year and start of another.
However, I am interested in working 20-25 hours a week instead of 40. It would be easiest to
determine a new yearly salary and then still be paid in 12 averaged installments like the faculty.
New vacation and sick leave accrual rates could be calculated over based on total number of
hours worked per year. Could anyone give me advice on how to do this? I might not be the only
one interested. It wouldn’t save the university a whole lot of money, but may be worth pursuing.
My journey has not been without a few bumps such as receiving sincere and very angry calls
over the play Corpus Christi, but life at UNI is very good.
114 Individual
Hi! I have already submitted some suggestions for improving UNI - but I forgot one of the most
important comments that I was going to talk about. That is early retirement. Bring it back! With
all of the budget woes it only makes sense to weed out the higher paid clerical
through early retirement and replace them with lower paid employees. There are several of us
who want to take advantage of this. Even though it means we cannot get free medical insurance
some are still interested. Of course if we could get the medical insurance included that would be
awesome. Same is true for faculty. Some of those people need to go because their teaching
skills have gone downhill. Bringing in younger faculty with fresh ideas is an advantage to the
students. Giving students a good education is what UNI is all about.
115 Individual
One thought popped into my head this morning when I came in to work. The bicycle racks had
been moved out from under the overhang and as I looked across the empty space I thought what
a nice place to have tables and chairs for staff to take their breaks and lunches! The
bicycle racks could be placed between the big trees next to the concrete seat just north of the
entryway. Signage could be hung to designate it as employee space so it would not be filled up
with students. This kind of goes in line with some space designated in the Union for faculty and
staff to use also. Also, I definitely think that early retirement should be returned and enhanced to
cover Merit staff in the same way faculty and P&S currently receive it, with phased retirement
included. There are probably more long-term merit staff on campus than any other group. This
would be a great reward for those that have made UNI their career. I will send you more thoughts
as I think of them. :-)
116 Anonymous
I believe that a key way to enhance UNI would be to reopen the Center for the Enhancement of
Teaching. The Center has played an instrumental role in creating a sense of community among
faculty. Activities of the center have promoted excellence in teaching, including the liberal arts
core, at all levels of the professoriate from assistant to full professors. The center has also
played a critical role in the socialization of new faculty to an academic culture focused on
excellence not only in research but also in teaching. The Center has been particularly important
to new faculty because networks of faculty created under the auspices of the center enable new
faculty to be more candid about their learning experiences with teaching than they often are in
their home departments, where they feel continual pressure of yearly assessments leading to
tenure or where they may encounter some senior faculty who lack enthusiasm for teaching in the
liberal arts core.
117 Individual
Strategic strengths can lead to weaknesses and vice versa. The twin questions, "What makes
UNI a great place to work?" and "What would make it better?" exploit that paradigm and allow us
to celebrate strengths while looking at ways to ameliorate the accompanying challenges.
What makes UNI a great place to work? Stability. Our employees of all classifications come
young and stay , often for their whole careers. Internal hires are not infrequent, spousal hires are
also common, and there is room and support for employees to advance in their careers and stay
on campus.
What would make it better? More change. More diversity, more new entrepreneurial ideas and
more pedagogical and curricular diversity. Less tenure, easier firing, more rewards for merit and
tools for retention. More professional development, More short term projects that have their run
and end making room for new projects as opposed to becoming institutionalized. A budget that
reallocates resources to reflect changed mission priorities and a changing role for the University.
What makes UNI a great place to work? Community. We are a small city state and as such we
tend to know one another - that familiarity making way for collaboration. As a nascent city state
we have it all with students and faculty able to live their entire lives on campus (with a few trips to
the Hill - which at least in practical terms is part of campus). We are safe, we know one another,
we are similar and we are, by and large a quiet campus where students are not lost in the shuffle
and cries are not drowned out by the sound of the band.
What would make it better? Less parochialism - more engagement. While the campus has made
great strides toward developing an external face and services that serve external constituencies,
the primary focus strategically and financially remains on internal constituencies. I would suggest
the campus redouble its effort top serve students better and expand its definition of students to
embrace Iowan enrolled and un-enrolled who learn from us and grow as people through our
actions. Focus on diversity, not just along traditional racial lines but, people of different religious
backgrounds, economic levels, ages and nationalities. Hire key "bleeding edge" talent from away
to refresh our outlooks and discourse.
What makes UNI a great place to work? Decentralization. Colleges and and departments are
empowered to run themselves with less bureaucracy. Productivity is enormous and I suspect, if it
were possible to measure, superior to the productivity of our regents sisters. Departments plan
their curricula and schedules, structure their faculties and run by their own rules. Decentralization
has allowed some University departments to blossom, rising to national prominence, and bringing
first in the nation education to Iowa's citizens.
What would make it better? Centralization. Some service functions; ITS, marketing and public
relations, public safety, library services, residence, etc. resist decentralization. In some cases
attempts to de-centralize these services have lead to duplication and very uneven levels of
service and performance between units. Other centralized services have become auxiliary
enterprises, reliant on other units for "pay as you go services" creating adversarial relationships
that fragment the campus. Some campus units have become fiefdoms, with entrepreneurial
leaders gaining while other valuable but less entrepreneurial units lose. If the decentralized
campus has allowed some departments to thrive it has also allowed some to wither. Poor
leadership, passive faculty or even frequent administrative turnover has allowed some
departments to fail or stagnate, drifting away from the Universities mission and goals. For most
of our students and citizens, their knowledge of the University is based on the small part they
interact with, sometimes this is great, sometimes not, but it is not consistent.
My point in bringing up all these things that you already know is that as campus leaders and
members of the campus community it is our responsibility to see the entire University and its
function in the world, recognizing that through _our choices_ we have strengths we must build on
and weaknesses inherent in those same decisions that we must work to ameliorate.
Thanks for giving us this chance to speak and be heard.
118 Individual
Actually, if possible, I would like to add to my earlier comment, because Memfis is just a part of a
larger effort to bring technology to the campus. I have no problem with technology; it can be a
great time saver. However, it should exist to provide better support services to allow us as heads
to carry out our duties in a more efficient and productive manner. Unfortunately, this is not
happening. Instead, departments are now doing more of the work which was previously done by
various support services. We do not have the budget to hire people to input data and deal with all
the work required, for example, to update our Program of Study templates on a regular basis. So,
what do I see a need for to make my life as a dept. head better? I would like to see better
support services to allow us to do what we need to do (our jobs) and achieve satisfaction rather
than frustration. Thanks.
119 Individual
What Makes UNI a Great Place to Work?
Working in higher education is a gift. I get the opportunity to help students develop themselves,
their dreams, and thereby contribute to a better world of educated citizens. It is a hopeful place,
one of planning for a future based on civil discourse, rooted in ethics and ideals.
The longevity of the staff at UNI has helped to create continuity and community, shared values
that develop over time through ongoing professional relationships. This builds trust, a foundation
for staff to feel able to take risks, be creative, and to take ownership of their work. I consider our
work more of a calling than a job to do. The staff has a strong affinity to UNI, and to the people
we work with.
What Would Make It Better?
UNI has made some effort to promote wellness, though the curriculum, and the WRC activities
and programming for students and staff. This effort has been undermined by the stress on
University departments and staff having to do more with less through budget cuts and
reorganization. Maintaining excellent programs requires staff time. When staff cuts occur, the
dedication of existing staff has maintained programs by adding to workloads at the cost of family
and free time. Burn out of good staff is a critical issue. We have made it through difficult financial
times because we feel passionate about our work with students and about this institution. This
attitude should be nurtured and not exploited. We need to help employees define a balance
between personal and professional lives, and to make it an attainable reality. If we don’t, we
send the message that we do not value employees, nor does it build trust and community.
Compensation packages need to be fair and comparable within the University. People working
long hours at lower pay should not see colleagues in the same department, or other departments
who do similar or less complex work earning more for fewer hours. Even though our work at
UNI is personally rewarding, equitable compensation should be applied campus wide.
I would recommend that UNI develop an institutional wellness model to be implemented in each
department. Recently a colleague brought some information back from a conference illustrating
vectors to measure drivers of engagement and performance generating institutional excellence
and personal fulfillment. The vectors serve as a corporate wellness model and consist of:
Meaning, Voice, Enrichment, Membership, Appreciation, Harmony. There are probably many
other models out there to provide a foundation for an institutional wellness effort. The leadership
in each organizational area has a responsibility for supporting this effort and helping to articulate
a shared vision that applies equally to faculty, P & S and merit. It means creating an environment
of trust, where actions resonate with words and stated values. This does not mean keeping track
of how many people use the WRC fitness programs, or overtime work, although that could be part
of it, but to really look at what would bring balance into each department and in turn to each
employee. Healthy, balanced, self-directed employees will be more creative and productive over
time. They will also model the kind of behavior we hope to teach students.
UNI employees are great people and can be trusted to creatively respond to a wellness model for
the workplace. This conversation on work environment is a great beginning and is to be
applauded. I hope employees will be empowered to become informed and involved in
determining strategy and decisions in carrying out the findings of this inquiry.
120 Individual
In addition to facilitating computer sales, UNI should configure those computers bought by facullty
for home use (perhaps for a nominal fee - $25?) as closely as possible to the office computers of
the faculty members. This would make it a lot easier for faculty to work at home. It is frustrating
when Control Z sends a message on one e-mail system, but erases the last line on another email system.
121 Anonymous
I think the parking situation definitely needs to be addressed. There is not near enough parking
up by Lang Hall. I think after the parking survey that this problem is maybe going to be
addressed. However, I really feel strongly that the "A" permit is already to expensive & it sounds
like it's going to be way higher if they remedy the problem. This definitely needs to be addressed.
122 Individual
Here are my suggestions (in random order). I work for the UNI Faculty Senate & know that they
have numerous suggestions, and many of mine were on their list.
1) reinstitute early retirement incentives for ALL employees
2) free or lowered tuition at Regents institutions for employee, spouse & children
3) free access to UNI Wellness Center for UNI employees & family
4) expanded family hours at Wellness Center
5) campus shutdown 2 weeks during Christmas/New Years break (cost saving measure)
6) reduced parking fees for employees & do not allow outside (non-UNI registered) vehicles to
park in A lots at any time except weekends (i.e. during state high school football playoffs)
7) encourage & develop more "flex time" options for Merit employees
8) reduced child care at UNI's Child Development Center for all employees
9) upon retirement/separating from UNI, option to "trade in" unused sick leave for extended health
insurance
10) vision (insurance) coverage for Merit employees, plus over all expanded health & dental
coverage
11) programs to acknowledge the value & importance of Merit employees
12) better discounts on computer purchases for personal use
13) employee discounts for UNI sponsored events (sports, GBPAC, etc.)
14) GET RID of MEMFIS - it's way too time consuming for those that use it & look at how many
people are employed just to keep it running!!
As for what's good about UNI,
1) faculty & staff that really care about students
2) an administration that is dedicated to seeing that students receive the best education they can
get
3) as a single parent, I am fortunate to currently work in a position that allows me a somewhat
flexible schedule to take care of the things that I need to
4) our benefits are good - but could be better
Thank you for allowing the opportunity to voice my suggestions/concerns.
123 Individual
What makes UNI a great place? One thing is the faculty. Graduate faculty at UNI experience an
extensive/exhaustive education to achieve a doctorate degree (or terminal degree appropriate to
their field). I would like to suggest a special shelf/corner in the library to house the
dissertations/creative projects of graduate faculty, to highlight these accomplishments. Is there a
graduate faculty member who does not have (at least) one spare copy of his/her work to donate
to the Library? I would enjoy seeing the collected works of our graduate faculty.
124 Group
*Create a systematic computer replacement program, including reinstating computer
computer mini-grants
*Create uniform standards for course teaching loads, teach-teaching, and class scheduling
*Enhance technology in classrooms
*Facilitate spouse/domestic partner hires
*Free campus mail delivery of Interlibrary Loan materials to faculty
*Hire additional faculty to maintain faculty/student ratio in anticipation of increasing
enrollment
*Improve initial and on-going new faculty orientation
*Investigate rules for departmental scholarships, e.g., can departments offer scholarships
targeted to out-of-state students?
*Increased campus financial support for research activities, e.g., mini-grants, equipment
maintenance, support staff
*Provide more forums for faculty input
*Provide stipends for teaching assistants that are competitive with peer institutions
*Provide financial support for a faculty senate speaker series
*Reinstate summer technology grants
*Renovate College of Education and Price Lab buildings
*Review term-faculty hiring/retention practices
*Strongly advocate interdisciplinary programs
*Compensate faculty for independent studies and readings courses
*Evaluate gender equity in salaries
*Evaluate Professional Development Assignments including criteria, increased
funding , and PDA’s for teaching enhancement
*Increase travel funds for professional activities, inc. conferences, workshops, etc.
*Maintain current health and medical coverage
*Negotiate long-term care benefits for retirees
*Negotiate improvements in dental plan and add eye care coverage
*Place a greater emphasis on the merit portion of salary compensation
*Establish a Faculty Senate Speaker & Seminar Series
*Evaluate initial and on-going new faculty orientation
*Examine possible grade inflation on campus
*Investigate reestablishment f the Center for the Enhancement of Teaching
*Review curriculum change process
*Review UNI’s Student’s First Campaign
(Making UNI A Better Place To Work)
*Acknowledge UNI service anniversaries
*Create a full-service campus restaurant focused on lunch
*Evaluate the effectiveness of the Memfis system
*Financial support for faculty/staff attendance of campus activities, inc. athletics,
GBPAC events
*Free/discounted tuition for spouses/children of faculty/staff, for example, a 10%
discount for each year of service
*Financial support for faculty/staff use of wellness resources
*Improve parking on campus (increase number of spaces, reduce or eliminate
permit cost, review parking regulations, encourage alternative means of
transportation
*Hire a carillonneur
*Hire additional support staff, especially for technology, research, and clerical support
*Increase library acquisition budget
*Publicize faculty/staff/collaborative accomplishments to external audiences
*Reinstate the early retirement program
*Require Department/Unit Head training and on-going professional development
125 Group
*Funding to Cover all Graduate Students
*Less or Streamlined Burearcracy (eg., academic program review, student outcomes
assessment)
*Expanded Travel (nationally and internationally)
*Replacement of Outdated Equipment (e.g., photocopier)
*Tuition Assistance for Families of Faculty and Staff
*Reduce Salary Discrepancies between Faculty and between Gender
*Bring Program Reviews Under UNI Control not the Regents
*Deemphasize Outcomes Assessment
*Does Memfis make sense?
*Work to Clean Area Surrounding Campus (1 mile)
*Parking
*Better/Alternative Teaching Evaluations
*Improve Offices
*Faculty Club
*Travel
*Release Time for Scholarly Activities
*Equity in Partnership Benefit Packages
*An Accepting Environment for Diversity
*Discounted Tickets to Campus Events
*Release Time for Coordinators
*Student Worker Hours
*Free ILL
*Consistent Research Evaluation (newsletters vs. peer reviewed publications)
*Money to Offset Research Materials Costs
*Grade Inflation
*Spouse Tuition Support
*Travel
*Reduced Fitness Membership
*Spouse Accommodation
*Streamline Curriculum Changes
*Money for Training
*Research Support (ILL, internal grant money)
*Teaching Center
*Course Reductions for Research
*Recognition for the Hard Work Faculty Do
126 Group
*Free Access to the Wellness Recreation Center
*A Real Sabbatical System
*Tuition Waiver for Faculty and their Immediate Families
*Restore Travel from the Graduate College
*Crease some kind of Space for Informal Discussion of Teaching Strategies
*Bring back the Possibility of Team-Teaching or Developing Innovate,
Interdisciplinary Courses
*More Money to bring in Speakers for Intellectual Stimulation
*Better, Longer new Faculty Orientation. Have Social Events for all new Faculty within last Three
Years throughout the Year
*More Funding for Travel, Conferences, Workshops, PDL
*More things the University can do to Assist Newly Employed Staff
*Family Discount at WRC
*Panther Pass to the Games and tickets to GBPAC
*At least a Reduction or Discount Tuition Fees – Remission- for Family Members to Attend UNI
*PDL that can Allow Faculty to do Things other than Research
*A Discussion of how to Adjust Equity
*A University-Wide Discussion on the Liberal Arts Core
*Increased Number of Faculty Lines
*”Teaching Staff” members Benefit from things like PDL that Faculty Benefit from
*Cost of Parking
*Bring in More Competitive, Diverse Students
*An Option that Allows each Department to Offer Out-Of-State Scholarships to Students
*Release Time for Teaching Large Classes
*Re-examine what Constitutes Load
*Re-institute Paid Medical Insurance and TIAA-CREF payments when entering Phased
Retirement
*Increase Technology Staff in Colleges
*Offer Sabbaticals rather than PDA
*Offer Pre-tenure PDA or Sabbatical in Year 5
*Compensation for Independent Studies and Readings Courses
*Place more Emphasis on and allocate more Money for Merit
*Be an Advocate for Interdisciplinary Course Teaching
*Fund Team Taught Interdisciplinary Course
*Offer Financial Support for Professional Memberships
*Offer Free Tuition for Faculty and Faculty Children
*Help with Domestic Partner and Spousal Hires
*Support Term Line Faculty so they do not have to Reapply every 3 Years
*Flexibility in Scheduling
*More Flexibility in Curriculum Development
*Value Faculty as Scholars/Artists
*Publicize Faculty/Staff/Collaborative Accomplishments to External Audiences
*Increase Library Acquisition Budget
*Enhanced Communication between Administrators and Departments
127 Group
1. Facilities
a. renovation of MPLS
b. renovation of COE
c. sound proofing walls of COE classrooms
d. get elmo and other technologies into all classrooms
2. Wellness Recreation Center
a. usage of general facilities free to faculty
b. usage of general facility free to family members or at least a reduced rate
c. specific classes available to above groups but may require fee
d. include free general usage as part of health plan
e. increased hours for faculty/family use
f. greater encouragement of faculty to become involved in wellness activities
g. creation of classes (yoga, stretching, low impact aerobics, etc.) that better
serve mature faculty (40s & 50s, rather than 20s)
h. lower the age of children for unsupervised use of the track (from 14 to 10 or so)
3. Tuition Assistance
a. free or reduced rates for spouse and/or children
b. free courses for faculty--maybe one per semester--to continue own education
4. Services
a. free delivery from Rod Library—faculty request found, copied, and sent
through campus mail
5. Campus Events
a. discount(s) to UNI events/athletics, GBPAC
6. Academics
a. increase passing time between classes MWF to 15 minutes
b. hold a series of lecture-discussions on topic of “Value/Importance
of the Profession of Being a Professor”
c. drop use of student evaluations for tenure-promotion decisions; identify
master teachers for peer evaluations
d. provide allocation of some PDA’s to new, junior faculty
e. when possible reinstate money for travel, computer mini-grants, summer
technology grants
f. improve computer technology support-review and where appropriate
increase minimum expectations of the college information technology
specialists
g. re-establishment of the Center for the Enhancement of Teaching, or some
equivalent system or structure for continuous development of teaching
excellence
h. Teaching load: develop greater clarity on the definition of “load” and teaching
on overload semester after semester
i. Provide department head professional development so that they can more
effectively help faculty enhance their teaching, service, and scholarship
j. Equitable distribution of travel money across departments and colleges
k. Revision of PDA criteria so that proposals focused on teaching and
curriculum development can be considered
7. Parking
a. increase hours of parking permits so that faculty with “A” permits can find
convenient parking when teaching night classes
b. protect faculty parking permits during Dome events during academic
hours—such as high school sport playoffs
8. General Faculty Meeting
a. hold this meeting prior to starting the semester as renewal of the University
community rather than seeming as an afterthought after the semester has begun
9. Student First Campaign
a. emphasis on “student first” has sometimes been translated into a disrespectful
attitude by students in the classroom—students thinking that they and their
needs are the most important
b. focus on student LEARNING first, by finding ways to let students work and
borrowing less (expand grants and scholarships)
10. Collegiality
a. recognition of collaborative research not just done that done by individuals
b. recognition of contributions of all faculty—not split between those east and
west of Hudson Road—those who do the “academics” and those who “play”
respectively
c. assist new faculty in becoming involved with the campus community—reserve
slot on some committees so that new faculty can get to know others beyond
their immediate area of expertise
d. the attitude of some faculty and administrators toward faculty in the COE-and the attitude of COE faculty toward MPLS Faculty—demonstrates
a lack of respect for each other areas of expertise
11.Health Issues
a. increase concern about providing a safe and healthy environment in
which to work
b. provision of eye care coverage
c. improved dental plan
12. Faculty Input
a. increased administrative concern for faculty input and opinions—such as in
hiring needs
13. Hire a Carillonneur
14. Re-institute the early retirement program
128 Group
*Help with Research (grants, teaching loads, projects not tied to grants, etc.)
*Additional Support Staff (clerical, technical)
*Computer Replacement Program
*Increased Stipends for Teaching Assistants
*Elimination of MEMFIS
*Better Incoming Students
*Additional Faculty
*More Recognition for Faculty Accomplishments
*More Equity/Respect between Administrators, Faculty and Staff
*Free Tuition at UNI for Children (Faculty/Staff)
*Free Access to the Wellness Center
*Reinstating the Center for the Enhancement of Teaching
*Money to Bring in “Big Name” Seminars/Speakers
*Free Interlibrary Loans
129 Group
University-Level Fulfillment Ideas (in alphabetical order by category)
Item
Category
Suggestion/Concern
1
Computers
Provide laptops to faculty wishing to use them to work at
home
2
Computers
3
Dining
Facilities
Improved discount program and payment plan options for
employees to purchase computers for personal use
Faculty club – dining, fitness, spa facility for faculty only
4
Dining
Facilities
Increase the number of healthy dining options on campus
5
Dining
Facilities
Make a “quiet” dining space available where one can eat
in relative quiet
6
Dining
Facilities
Provide a full-service, quiet dining area where employees
can make reservations and take guests or employment
candidates for reasonably-priced meals
7
Environmental
Reduce the amount of waste generated by university food
services (reduce use of Styrofoam and plastic
containers, etc.)
8
Environmental
Campus-wide promotion of recycling
9
Environmental
University adoption of environmentally friendly practices
10
Environmental
Better communication about recycling program (such as
details about what can be placed in paper recycling bins and
status of our recycling efforts)
11
Ergonomics
Provide individually-tailored ergonomic workstations for
employees
12
Event Tickets
Employees can purchase reduced price tickets to athletic
and cultural events the day of the event (similar to
student rush program)
13
Insurance
Benefits
Maintain/improve medical insurance coverage
including: mental health coverage parity,
major/catastrophic coverage (e.g. hospitalization),
preventive measures (e.g. dieticians, orthotics, full birth
control reimbursement, arch supports), etc.
14
Insurance
Benefits
Improve dental coverage (e.g. add coverage of orthodontia
employees, coverage of treatment for TMJ syndrome)
15
Insurance
Benefits
provide optical insurance coverage
16
Insurance
Benefits
Add Long-Term Care insurance as an employee benefit
17
Parking
No parking fees for university employees
18
Parking
Increase number of parking spaces available (consider
ramp)
19
Parking
Incentives to promote carpooling such as those who carpool
have closest parking spaces reserved for them
20
Parking
Incentives for employees who bicycle or walk to work
21
Parking
University—run bus service (or partnership with MET
transit) to provide transportation to off-campus sites like
downtown CF
22
PDAs/leaves
Expand PDAs to include learning and service opportunities,
as well as research opportunities
23
PDAs/leaves
Provide PDAs on a rotating schedule within departments
24
PDAs/leaves
Create an alternate PDA-like system for not-yet-tenured
faculty
25
PDAs’leaves
Examine/modify procedures used to assess whether one was
productive on PDAs
26
Retirement
Benefits
Increase the percentage that the university will match/
contribute to employee TIAA-CREF accounts
27
Retirement
Reinstate the early retirement program for faculty
(all employees)
28
Schedule/
Breaks
One three-day weekend off per month (add three-day
weekends to months without holidays such as
October, February, etc.)
29
Schedule/
Breaks
Week-long break in October
30
Service
Some release time for service in metropolitan area
schools (e.g., guest teaching, sexual abuse prevention
education, or tutoring, etc.)
31
Spouses
Placement assistance/employment support for
accompanying spouses
32
Teaching
Afford library faculty the opportunity to teach
for-credit university courses for just compensation
(e.g., money or work replacement)
33
Technology/
Training
Support faculty in creating and maintaining websites;
maintain an Online repository of course syllabi
34
Technology/
Training
Support faculty use of technology by providing
frequent, user-friendly training
35
Tuition
Full or partial tuition remission for employees and their
dependents
36
UNI Service
Award
Acknowledge UNI service anniversaries for all faculty,
merit, confidential, and P & S employees (for example
with gold-tone UNI lapel pin given at first year &
amethysts added each 5-year anniversary)
37
Wellness
Employees may use WRC facilities or any chosen
alternative to it free of charge
38
Wellness
Employees may attend WRC fitness classes and/or
receive ongoing personal trainer services free of charge
39
Wellness
More/extended lap swim as well as more open swim hours
at WRC facilities
40
Wellness
Free locker and towel services at WRC facilities
41
Wellness
Aerobics classes with no boot camp or kick boxing
42
Wellness
Free or low cost massage services
43
Wellness
Age-tailored classes at WRC, options for those older than
22 (cognizant of physical needs/limits of those older than
22)
44
Wellness
Faculty club—dining, fitness, spa facility for faculty only
………. Fulfillment Ideas (in alphabetical order by category)
1
Annual
Activity
Report
Restructure and simplify the library faculty annual
activity report
2
Communication
Improve the library-wide distribution of information
3
Communication
Work to eliminate perceptions of secrecy and work to
curb gossip
4
Dining
Allow employees to each lunch (or food) in their offices,
with certain exemptions for persons who sit only at a
public service desk ergonomics
6
Flex Scheduling
Enable faculty to work from home when commitments
permit
7
Flex Scheduling
Enable faculty to control their work schedule; let them
work when they are feeling creative and take comp
time in return
8
Flex Scheduling
Evaluate faculty on whether and how well their work is
accomplished rather than when and where it is
completed
9
Goal-Setting/
Reporting
Simplify the goal-setting/reporting process
10
Keys
Provide library faculty with keys to one library entrance
and/or institute electronic key code to access for work
purposes during closed hours
11
Keys
Provide faculty with keys to instruction rooms/faculty
lounge (or re-key our office keys to enable faculty access
with our office key)
12
Recycling
Better distribution of information about what can be
recycled
13
Recycling
Greater efforts to recycle and reduce waste in general
14
Security
Increased security in service areas—video cameras?
15
Security
Continue examining & addressing security/safety issues
in library and provide better communication of major
incidents to all employees
16
Time
Commitments
Reduce faculty time commitments; increase “free” time
17
Time
Commitments
Provide more time-off for library administrators; free
up their schedules to enable them to use their
vacation days
18
Time
Commitments
(Summer)
Reduce services in the summer when demand isn’t as
great (e.g., not scheduling a librarian at the reference desk
until closing)
19
Time
Commitments
(Summer)
Assess impact of expanded summer session; make
summers more rejuvenating for library faculty
20
Time
Commitment
(Summer)
Provide faculty with the option of taking the entire
(or another semester) off in exchange for pro rata
reduced pay
21
Training
Make innovative software programs more widely
available to library faculty and provide them with
appropriate training—provide them with tools to learn
and improve
22
Travel
Support
Annually provide each non-administrative library
faculty member with money (e.g., $500) that he/she
personally manages and uses for professional travel
130 Individual
Just a small thing. I have been here for 20 years and have not often run into the words to the UNI
fight song. I can clap with the best of them, but I don't remember seeing the words to the song. It
might be a loyalty and teamwork building measure to put the words and the music out on the web
where it can be accessed. Years ago it was expected that first year students learn the words to
the schools fight song.
131 Anonymous
What makes UNI such a great place to work is the sense of community. Community however
until you are injured at work, then you become a liability and discarded.
Something needs to be done for employees who are injured on the job and have work
restrictions. Currently UNI is not allowing employees with any restrictions to return to work. The
Worker Compensation doctor releases the employee to return to work with restrictions then when
the University doesn’t allow them to return, they are denied long term disability because
according to Principle they can work as stated by the doctor.
This will become more of a problem without the early retirement option that was available in the
past as employees have to work until Medicare age in order to have health insurance for
themselves and family.
In summary, light duty positions need to be created and the early retirement program which
includes health care needs to be reinstated.
132 Individual
A few last minute thoughts that are a bit more specific.
To lead off with a positive, Hooray for a campus where people feel comfortable voicing their
opinion on the public record! A rare thing in academe or anywhere else for that matter...
Now for the suggestions: As we contemplate changes in campus policy, rather than comparing
ourselves to our peers, seeking parity - let us seek excellence.
Make the travel reimbursement paid by the University for usage of a personal vehicle equal to
the cost charged the department for using a UNI vehicle. This would let us shrink the fleet. (As I
write this it seems so obvious that I'm probably missing key information).
People don't do great work for money, they do great work for people they care about (the primary
motive at UNI). Lets find a way to provide benefits (like University or donated cars, comp tickets,
country club memberships) to key people on every level and of every employment group that
earn special treatment. Lets incentivise great work with parking spaces, free WRC membership,
free Panther wear or even heaven forfend, tickets to the Gallagher. Lets reward folks that
departments and divisions recognize as doing great work and make it part of our culture.
Speaking of community lets encourage participation in the community by institutionalizing release
time and support for participation in service clubs and volunteering. The more we interact with
and serve our community the more they will do the same for us.
Let us undertake campus wide service projects that we select by vote and gather together to
accomplish. Imagine the impact of 1000 UNI mentors in the schools or a habitat for humanity
house with a panther purple front door. Service learning by example.
Let us negotiate discounted rates for UNI employees at Museums, Golf Courses, Art Schools,
Country Clubs and other places either directly or through the foundation.
UNI is a remarkable place full of remarkable people. For years we have taken pride in doing
much with very little. As our revenue picture stabilizes we should dream big and build on our
strengths.
133 Individual
Just a suggestion to have the yearly staff picnic in September during a workday instead of on the
weekend. Those of us that live out of town have to make a special trip back in order to enjoy the
festivities. An afternoon off would be nice for all employees to celebrate the end of summer. I
have yet to be able to attend one. Usually all the weekends in September are busy with
weddings, family get togethers, etc. It would be nice to be able to enjoy this celebration on a
weekday instead. Possibly a Friday afternoon would be nice for all staff to attend. For the staff
that have to be at their jobs during the day, maybe it would be possible for coworkers to each go
at different times and cover for each other and have the picnic for an extended time maybe 12:006:00 p.m. That should allow most workers to be able to attend. If need be, have an outside
caterer come, like Hy-vee. I guess just think of another time when "all" University employees
could attend. Once again, this is just my suggestion on how to make UNI a better place to work.
134 Individual
ERIP needs to come back. Most people CANNOT retire without insurance benefits.
Charges for Wellness, Gallagher-Bluedorn, athletic and other events should be reduced in order
to encourage employees to be active on campus.
Parking permits should be priced on a sliding fee scale. Employees who earn $20,000 should not
be expected to pay the same amount as employees who earn $200,000
The President needs to come to the Physical Plant from time to time. Contact with him is pretty
minimal for most employees. The Physical Plant is one of the largest operations on campus in
terms of budget and number of employees. It does not appear to be a a priority with this
administration.
Stop non-competitive promotions from within. A competitive process with posting jobs would
ensure better staffing decisions at the management level. The higher up you go, the more
important it is.
Stop doing continuous reorganization. The end result is not generally significantly better. The
same employees get re-assigned to different positions and get raises. Reorganization always
costs $$$$$.
135 Individual
We have terrific IT staff both campus wide and within our unit (the library). The fact that we do not
have to deal with major problems with computers and the network makes doing our jobs a lot
more pleasant.
136 Individual
I think the bumping situation was poorly handled. We had people ready to sell their homes or
move in with family because they were going to get bumped then it was delayed until the end of
the fiscal year. These aren't just _positions_ that are being affected, it's people's_ lives and
families. _It was really hard to want to come to work knowing how crappy our co-workers were
being treated. It was also a slap in the face that after those people were bumped last summer,
there were several P&S positions advertised.
137 Individual
I have been a part of the UNI campus for 26 years, either as a student or as an employee. I feel
UNI is the best place in the world to work. When I reflect on why I feel that way, I conclude that it
is because of the community atmosphere. UNI is attractive, well maintained, and friendly, with a
spirit of comradery woven throughout the entire community. I extend appreciation to all those to
work hard to plan and maintain the grounds and the facilities. Also, to the administration for
cultivating an open and ever growing sense of community that encompasses everyone on
campus.
The past couple of years have been challenging with the budget situation and the advent of
MEMFIS; this has been the cause of much stress throughout the campus. I am hopeful that the
economic situation will stabilize and that as enrollment increases we will see our human
resources increase proportionately. I feel our human resources are currently stretched to the
limit. MEMFIS on the other hand, has been a giant leap in technical learning and the added
responsibilities that have come with it. But what I see is the UNI campus coming together
through this struggle to learn; individuals reaching out to individuals from other departments
asking for assistance and working together to learn or resolve problems. While this has been
difficult, there has been a positive result – that of respect for each other and a sense of unity (we
are all in this together!). Phase II will involve everyone on campus, and I know that the UNI
community will persevere.
I extend one final note of appreciation to work in an environment where my opinion is welcome,
and for this opportunity to express it.
138 Anonymous
I have, since my hireing enjoyed working for UNI. My concerns mirror most here; parking, the
ability to use the WRC, and having my work be appreceated. I think that university employees
should not have to pay for education, so long as they their studies didn't conflict with completion
of their work. I think that there should be a greater insentive for staff members to seek additional
training to make them better emoloyees and that staff members should be rewarded when they
complete additional education or certification (MBA, CPA, PHD.)
139 Individual
In order to help promote wellness couldn't we have "free walking" in the WRC from say 12:00 1:30 and a reduced yearly membership for faculty and staff? Plus, what about walking in the
West Gym as well over the 12:00 - 1:30 noon hour.
140 Individual
It would be very helpful to have a shelf put back in the ladies restroom downstairs in Gilchrist
Hall. There was an overhead coat rack that was taken out which leaves no place to put papers,
books, etc.
I appreciate how "beautiful" our campus is (flowers in spring, summer, fall), the restoration of the
buildings (both inside and out), the architectural designs of the new buildings. All of these
aesthetic enhancements to our campus and provide us with a wonderful environment to work in.
This on-going process will continue to add to our beautiful environment here at UNI.
Sometimes it would be helpful to have a mentor who understands certain office politics, etc.which would help provide a type of "in house" training program.
141 Anonymous
I feel the university should NOT raise parking fees for a ramp being built with free funding. Thank
you.
142 Individual
Most importantly - address the issue of a salary increase (other than contract raises) after an
employee reaches the top merit step.
I realize it can't be a neverending automatic increase, but there needs to be something added for
those who are at the top of the merit ladder. I really think it should be weighted on excellence of
work (similar to merit pay that faculty get).
Have an annual "Merit Employee of the year" or something like that. It is done for faculty and P &
S, but merit has been ignored. Have some cash connected to it.
Several comments regarding employees taking UNI classes:
Please consider not charging tuition to employees. Don't you want a more highly trained staff?
Set a high gpa rate for free tuition and only really serious people would take the classes. This
would be an excellent goodwill gesture toward employees and would cost the university very little
if anything.
Employees taking classes should not have to pay student fees. When we take 5 hours or more,
the student fees kick in. They are substantial (several hundred dollars). True, the staff training
grant (if received) pays for a portion, but it seems redundant to pay a computer fee and a health
fee when we already have access to a computer at our job and don't use the labs and when we
have health insurance. (I have taken a night class and a day class for years and get burned
every semester)
Give us the days between christmas and new year's off. We are pretty much forced to use up 3-4
days of vacation.
Free employee use of WRC and Healthbeat facilities.
Benefits - add some eye care coverage.
Why do faculty and P & S get a better medical benefit package? They should be equal. An
employee is an employee is an employee. The difference in treatment of faculty/p&s/merit is an
ongoing issue.
Get the parking lots cleared off BEFORE we are supposed to be at work during a snowstorm.
And the sidewalks.
Lower the parking permit charge. Or at least keep it the same for a few years.
Consider a fall break. A Monday and Tuesday in the middle of October would be fabulous for
everyone and make the long march from Labor Day to Thanksgiving much more tolerable.
In closing, I want to say that I love working at UNI and feel fortunate, but the above are
suggestions that would make it even better.
143 Anonymous
I think what makes UNI a great place to work is the diverse groups I come in contact with. Most
always there is a congenial attitude - even in tough times. I also think an early retirement
program, for everyone, faculty and staff, would improve the university. It would get new people
in who would have new ideas to plug in - in every area.
144 Anonymous
I think there could be many improvements made to the concessions at the UNI dome. For
instance, the souvenir cup has been discontinued (out of stock) since sometime before the
homecoming game on Oct. 9th, however, they still had this on the board (marquee) as a choice
even through the high school playoff games. It was suggested to people to take this off the board
(along w/ other suggestions) as they were no longer in stock, but they didn’t do so. Many
customers would become aggravated when we told them we didn’t have any, especially when
they would come back a few weeks latter and still see it offered as a choice to them. Many
customers were also confused by the wording of the fountain drink sizes. One of the choices was
a regular size. Many customers got confused whether that was a small or medium and we would
often give them the regular size (small) and then they would want the other size and this would
hold up the line. It would be nice if the sign said small, medium, and large. It would also be nice
if there were professional signs with the prices on them that we could place on the cups that we
put on top of the fountain machines to show people the size of the cups so they could just glance
at the cup sizes and see the price on the cup (this would speed things up). Many customers ask
the price of each cup the way it is now. Customers also get confused as to the wording of the
popcorn sizes. Why not just say small and large. Also, last year we sold a lot more small
popcorn sizes when the price was $1.50. Customers think $2.00 is too much for small popcorn.
The Papa Murphy’s pizza sizes are inconsistent. Many customers also don’t like to pay $2.00 for
a warm bottle of water. There needs to be a better system for keeping this water cold. (Larger
coolers or something). I don’t know if it would speed up the lines or not, but the fountain drinks
slow things down. I know there is a lot of profit in fountain drinks, but maybe 20 oz drinks w
The other thing that I don’t understand, but I don’t have time now to go into detail as I have a
meeting to get to is that there is a student from Iran who applied to a doctorate program and got
accepted but she wasn’t given an assistantship or any money to pay for her schooling. I here
how the University is always trying to promote diversity, but in this case she has been told to
basically keep her options open and to apply to other colleges. This sure isn’t helping the
diversity issue! This student has sure opened my eyes to many issues. They have come along
ways over the past three years. Their English has greatly improved. I know this student takes her
studies very seriously and puts in countless hours. She has a heart of gold and helped many of
her fellow classmates. Her professors have been impressed with her as well. I know her goal is
to be a faculty member here. It’s just sad that she will have to leave because we don’t have
money for her to stay. I wish I could write more or a better, but I’m pressed for time.
145 Anonymous
Individual
It would really be nice if the lounge chairs in the downstairs public break area of Gilchrist Hall
could be replaced with more comfortable ones. It takes all of about 2 minutes of sitting in them
for me to get a backache--they are "very uncomfortable".
The first question is easy: Where else can I work where I can stroll across a beautiful campus,
enjoy the arts, lectures, free computer training, have easy access to many different dining
choices, walk less than a block to a library, etc., etc., without leaving my workplace.
And even more importantly, I work in an educational environment with very intelligent, motivated
professionals who at the same time are "down to earth" and caring individuals. I tell everyone
now that UNI is the best place I have ever worked--not the best paying nor the most
prestigious position I've ever held, nor offering the most opportunity for advancement--which at
one point in my life was top priority--but still the best place I have ever worked.
The second question takes more thought. I have some things to share that came quickly to mind,
but do not want to appear negative. And, as this is a small office, I would not like to have them
taken too personally. So, with that said, my offerings would be the intangibles:
1.
Number 1 being TRUST. Can't emphasize that enough.
2. Close behind that would be empowerment of employees (which I don't see as much of as I
would like at the lower end of the employee ranks). I read something once that regrettably I didn't
copy at the time but it went something like I'm not smart enough to do the job, but I am smart
enough to hire good people to do the job and then get the heck out of their way while they do it.
That's empowerment. Trusting the people you hire enough to let them do their job without micromanaging.
3. Close behind or equal to that is professional development--including paid workshops off
campus. Sure we have a budget crunch, but we should not let that become an excuse for the
things we don't deem priorities. I do see some training opportunities coming from HR but mostly
directed to "managers/leaders" whoever that may include. Some of us are drawn to the
educational setting because we have a lifelong love of learning and an inner desire to develop to
our potential. I have sometimes felt that since I do not have the "P&S" designation, I am not
deemed quite as intelligent, worthy, or maybe necessary as the P&S employees. Why? I have
the same degree as many. Some do not even have a degree, but it sometimes appears that
once you receive the P&S designation, you are automatically elevated to a level of higher
intelligence or trustworthiness. Those attributes should be assigned to the person, not the
position.
4. Others would be feeling your contribution is valued, instilling a culture of partnership across all
levels (because we all know that without the lower positions, top management wouldn't operate
long).
5. Information sharing is also high on the list but I do think President Koob tries and is definitely
on the right track (humble opinion) with involving others besides just P&S this year. I heard such
good comments from people who attended his "Meet the President" meetings, even though we
may have liked to have better attendance. After I jotted down my initial thoughts, I did do some
Web searching and was surprised to find there is a "Great Place to Work Institute" out
there with "great" information, including a model which has five dimensions (all copyrighted):
Credibility - open door, they listen
Respect - employees are not afraid to make mistakes so are able to explore ideas
Fairness - can count on unbiased feedback, differences in people valued, etc.
Pride - feel as though I make a difference, latitude to make decisions and implement them to get
the job done
Camaraderie - people care about each other.
Robert Levering is the founder and there is a book I intend to check out from our library. He
defines a great place to work as a place where "employees trust the people they work for, have
pride in what they do, and enjoy the people they work with and this is measured by: (following
all plagiarized)
1. The relationship between employees and management. (Trust between managers and
employees is the primary defining characteristic of the very best workplaces.)
2. The relationship between employees and their jobs/company."
3. The relationship between employees and other employees."
Other information includes (all copyrighted so I don't want to get into trouble here):
"Good employers create the best possible workplace which enhances a firm's ability to perform
well (financially);" ...sees profits as a means of enhancing employees' lives; "Business benefits
associated with becoming and sustaining a great place to work...including higher productivity,
greater retention and increased innovation and creativity. I am hoping some on your CAG have
also done some research. My real concern if CAG is serious about this, is the "ambitious" time
frame set. The 58 statement employee survey this institute does takes 5-6 months, I believe I
read. They rank employers (I don't know a lot about it at this point, but sounds like employers
apply, is a little costly). The top 5 are Texas Instruments, Federal Express, Johnson & Johnson,
Eli Lilly and Philips Software, if some on your committee would like to look at what others have
done and are doing. I realize we are an educational institution, but all the more reason to do a
little research on this topic. I hope this is a "process," not a project. Sorry, I got a little involved
and "wordy" here. Thanks for the opportunity.
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